tunedout wrote: » Aren't you very culturally educated. Maybe move off to 'tie land' altogether and i'll continue to call it Thigh land and everyone will know what I mean. And from now on, I'm going to make an extra effort to pronounce the h in 'Thames'. Going to hold my tongue between my teeth and making the nicest longest h hiss everytime. A 'h' exists, and so it shall be pronounced.
old hippy wrote: » People who refuse, point blank, to try something new.
andym1 wrote: » People at the checkout who decide they forgot something and go back down the shop and the whole process grinds to a halt:(
Rasheed wrote: » Going along in the car listening to the radio and a good song comes on. And then the other person decides to sing along, badly, and ruins the whole fecking song for me.
xabi wrote: » Oh dear, because its tie land not thigh land
yeppydeppy wrote: » People who put butter in the fridge - it's no use to anyone when it's hard as stone. Just leave it on the kithcen counter / table in a covered butter dish and everyone is happy. It won't go off, I live alone and never put butter in the fridge and it doesn't go off.
Whatsernamex33 wrote: » People using a butter knife, then dip that knife into a jar of jam. Who even has those together?
guttenberg wrote: » If your the driver you can kick them out, if your passo, STFU drivers rules:D
kellogscoffey wrote: » Buttery knife into jam is fine. It's the jammy knife into butter that's the problem.
The King of Moo wrote: » Re "Thames/Thailand:" The generally-accepted standard pronunciation of both is with a silent "h," but the pronunciation of the "h" is so common that it's not really considered an error. They're also understandable because in most words with "th," the pronunciation is different from "t" on its own (as in "bath" and "bat").Similarly, the "h" is usually pronounced in the name "Thomas," but it's quite acceptable not to pronounce it, particularly in many American accents. What's crucial about all of these variations is that the meaning is still clear. I don't think pronunciation is important as long as it's quite clear what you're saying. It's also problematic to pronounce certain pronunciations as "correct," as pronunciation is inextricably attached to accent. Americans, for example, tend not to pronounce the "h" in words with "wh" like "white" and "whistle." For many of them, there's no difference between "Wales" and "whales." Similarly, some British accents will pronounce "th" differently to Irish accents. Many Irish people don't even distinguish between "th" and "t." I believe pronunciation should only be important in cases where deviations from the norm make it difficult to understand a person. Some important pronunciation issues I've asked been asked about by students recently include: "live" and "leave," "want" and "won't," and, crucially, "can't" and "c*nt."
IzzyWizzy wrote: » No, it isn't. The t is never supposed to be pronounced in Thomas. The only people I've ever heard pronounce it are D4 types trying to overcompensate, having been brought up to think that not pronouncing 'th' makes you sound common. Sometimes you're really not supposed to pronounce it. It sounds 100 times worse to my ears for someone to say 'thigh' when they meant 'Thai' than the other way around. I think it's because it's so pretentious.
Whatsernamex33 wrote: » People using a butter knife, then dip that knife into a jar of jam. Who even has those together? People leaving out milk or butter, instead of putting them back into the fridge. People drinking out of said milk carton. People who talk on their phones while being served by a sales assistant, also people who aren't mannerly.