Re: Is yaz-meen an acceptable pronunciation of Yasmine?
in reply to a message by erb816
For me names are personal nouns and are pronounced as the owner indicates. Yet - there is variance - and this variance, at least to me, brings diffuse elements of personalization.
I mentioned recently that a lady pronounces my name as Bawbuwa: this is how her diction of the "b" & "r" combination naturally phonates. Honestly - I find this adorable. Others naturally pronounce my name differently - and still, without mispronunciation - or at least I wouldn't believe that anyone is trying to muff it.
When the letter "I" functions as a schwa, or a letter "e" suffix is silent, but supposedly affects the vowel which precedes it - I would rarely be fully aware that such were so unless / until given an auditory example to imitate.
I would hesitantly pronounce "Jasmin" with a traditional J (not "y" as though a consonant) sonority, and "Yazmin" with 'Y' as though a traditional consonant, but honestly, I would be hesitant before trying to pronounce a person with such a spelling, as I simply would not want to mispronounce a (the) person's name.
I mentioned recently that a lady pronounces my name as Bawbuwa: this is how her diction of the "b" & "r" combination naturally phonates. Honestly - I find this adorable. Others naturally pronounce my name differently - and still, without mispronunciation - or at least I wouldn't believe that anyone is trying to muff it.
When the letter "I" functions as a schwa, or a letter "e" suffix is silent, but supposedly affects the vowel which precedes it - I would rarely be fully aware that such were so unless / until given an auditory example to imitate.
I would hesitantly pronounce "Jasmin" with a traditional J (not "y" as though a consonant) sonority, and "Yazmin" with 'Y' as though a traditional consonant, but honestly, I would be hesitant before trying to pronounce a person with such a spelling, as I simply would not want to mispronounce a (the) person's name.
This message was edited 8/26/2018, 1:14 PM