View Message

Pronunciation of Thalia?
How would you pronounce it?thay-LIA?
tay-LIA?
thar-LIA?
tar-LIA?How?
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

TAH-lee-ahthat would be the Dutch way...

vote up1
tha-LIE-ahThese are the pronunciations listed on both the Oxford English Dictionary (http://dictionary.oed.com/cgi/entry/50250233?single=1&query_type=word&queryword=thalia&first=1&max_to_show=10) and the Encarta dictionary (http://encarta.msn.com/dictionary_/thalia.html - listen to the spoken pronunciation) I prefer this pronunciation over all the others.
~Louise x
~*~Top Names~*~
Charles Frederick & Isabel Primrose

This message was edited 12/1/2006, 12:27 AM

vote up1
TAR-lia.:)
vote up1
.
vote up1
I say tal-ee-ah.
~ Arcadia ~
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
vote up1
TAHL-ya.
--------------------"The dog is a gentleman; I hope to go to his heaven, not man's."
- Mark Twain.
vote up1
TAL-ee-ah, is how I would say it.
♥♥♥
Currently Loving
Jasper Lewis
&
Virginia "Ginger" Laure
vote up1
TAHL-ya
This is my resting spot
I can let myself breathe
I may not be perfect
But at least I am free

This message was edited 11/30/2006, 3:13 PM

vote up1
Tal-ee-uh

Future Mom to Adeline and...?
vote up1
Me Too...
vote up1
Actually, I pronounce it THAYL-yuh, with the accent on the first syllable. That's because I learned how to pronounce the name from watching an old American television show called The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, where Thalia Menninger was the beautiful girl the teenage Dobie had his main crush on, and that was how the name was said in that series:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Many_Loves_of_Dobie_GillisHowever, in the USA today most girls being given this name are of Hispanic or Greek descent, and they tend to pronounce it as TAHL-ee-ah, like the American television reporter Thalia Assuras does.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thalia_Assuras By the way, the modern pronunciation with the "t" instead of the "th" sound I think has definitely been influenced by Spanish or other European languages where the English "th" sound does not occur. Since the original Greek name begins with "theta", and the Greek letter theta was pronounced with the sound heard in the English word "thin" by the 2nd century A.D., one could argue that a pronunciation with the "th" sound reflects better the way the name would have been pronounced when it was first brought into English from Greek. http://www.cogsci.indiana.edu/farg/harry/lan/thetapro.htm

This message was edited 11/30/2006, 1:30 PM

vote up1
Relieved to hearthat the "th" pronunciation is correct, because I've always said THAHL-yah or THAHL-ee-ah, actually because of the word "theta," believe it or not.~Lillian~
Proud daughter of Ann and John
Proud sister of Lauren and Leah
Proud wife of David
Proud mother of Alexander, Scarlett, Sophia, and Gideon
vote up1
I prefer THAY-lee-a, but it seems like it's most commonly pronounced TAHL-ya or TAHL-ee-a.
vote up1
Oh, good. I thought I was alone. :-)
vote up1
The H is silent, and there is definitely no R in it. (Aussie are you?)I say it like the name Talia, somewhere between tal-ee-uh and tal-ya depending on how slowly I'm speaking.
vote up1
I would say TAHL-ya or THAL-ya. Generate Your Own Glitter Graphics @ GlitterYourWay.com - Image hosted by ImageShack.us
vote up1
Well, I know a theatre with ths name pron. ta-LI-ah, but I would normally pron. it TA-li-ah.
vote up1
I don't know if this is correct, but I say, "THAY-lia."
vote up1
neither do I sorry
Future Proud Mom of Juliana Faith or Donovan Pierce.

pregnancy week by week
-----
vote up1
I don't say it like any of those.I say TAL-yah (with the A in TAL sounding like the A in "apple" or "drag") or TAHL-yah alternately.Array
vote up1