Re: Any other less common pronunciations?
in reply to a message by Kate
Not now, I don't think. But in the eighteenth century, if I remember, the -th- in Dorothy was pronounced like the Th in Thomas ... so she'd have been Dorotty. Then with the spread of literacy, people started pronouncing the letters they saw, instead of doing what they heard older people do ... probably because Dorothy was never as popular a name as Thomas, so they weren't so accustomed to it.
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Messages

Ralph - RALF or RAYF  ·  Kate  ·  5/24/2007, 9:56 AM
Re: Ralph - RALF or RAYF  ·  Elea  ·  5/25/2007, 3:19 PM
Re: Ralph - RALF or RAYF  ·  Lauren B  ·  5/30/2007, 5:04 AM
Sophia pronounced "so-FYE-a." Really?  ·  Kate  ·  5/29/2007, 11:35 AM
Any other less common pronunciations?  ·  Kate  ·  5/30/2007, 2:37 PM
Re: Any other less common pronunciations?  ·  Anneza  ·  5/31/2007, 4:32 AM
Re: Sophia pronounced "so-FYE-a." Really?  ·  Cera  ·  5/30/2007, 12:14 PM
Re: Sophia pronounced "so-FYE-a." Really?  ·  Anneza  ·  5/29/2007, 10:46 PM
Yeah, I know one 'Sofia' who pronounces is like that. nt  ·  Maridawn  ·  5/29/2007, 4:37 PM
Re: Ralph - RALF or RAYF  ·  Anneza  ·  5/24/2007, 10:59 PM
Re: Ralph - RALF or RAYF  ·  Maridawn  ·  5/24/2007, 4:33 PM
Ralph Fiennes. :-) nt  ·  Miranda  ·  5/25/2007, 9:43 PM
that's the one! nt  ·  Maridawn  ·  5/26/2007, 9:12 AM