Comments (Pronunciation Only)

Pronounced ee-O.
Io of Ovid’s Metamorphoses (8 CE) is of Graeco-Roman origin. From Latin (Īō) EE-o, and Classical Greek Ἰώ (Īṓ) EE-AW.The etymology for Ἰώ is Pre-Greek. From Ιω (Iô) EE-o. Consisting of the unknown Pre-Indo-European language(s) spoken in prehistoric Greece before the advent of the Proto-Greek language in the Greek peninsula during the Bronze Age.In Greece, during the Classical Period (5th BCE Attic), it took the pronunciation IPA: /iː.ɔ̌ː/ EE-AW; today, specifically used within the contexts of Classical Greek literature. From 1 CE-15 CE, throughout the Greek peninsula, eventually taking on the pronunciation IPA: /iˈo/ EE-o. Its decendants are Greek Ιώ (Īó), pronounced ee-O, and Latin Io (Īō), pronounced EE-o.Modern Greek, which, as pronounced by people in Greece, has two spellings and pronunciations, either Ιω (EE-o) or Ιώ (ee-O).In Ancient Greek, the ω (omega) vowel is pronounced [o], exactly like omicron. (The reason for the redundancy is to be found in Classic Greek). Long open mid-back [o], as in “law” (British English pronunciation, NOT American English pronunciation).In Classical Greek, omicron (ο) represented a short /o/ sound, while omega (ω) represented a long /ɔː / sound. By second century BCE, the length distinction was lost in pronunciation, and the two letters came to be pronounced identically. Therefore, in Classical Greek, ⟨ω⟩ represented 
[ɔː]; in Modern Greek, ⟨ο, ω⟩ represent [o].Pronouncing 'Omicron': 'AH-muh-cron' or 'Oh-MY-cr…: https://youtu.be/8VUUnz20X94As Carl Sagan, American astronomer and science communicator put it, "the word is of Eastern Mediterranean origin and pronounced as the people of the Mediterranean first said the name (EE-o)". In all Mediterranean and European languages, depending on the language, the name for the Greek naiad nymph, Argive princess, moon-goddess, heroine, and moon of Jupiter is pronounced both EE-o and/or ee-O; with the exception of English, its official pronunciations and that of the moon of Jupiter are EE-o and the British translation EI-o.
In English, the name is pronounced EYE-Oh, at least the moon of Jupiter is pronounced this way. I think it is beautiful, but only when pronounced like this.
Pronounced "yo".

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