contentbot@lemmy.caB to Cool Guides@lemmy.caEnglish · 1年前A Cool Guide: After I said “E as in egg” to customer service I looked up this guidei.redd.itimagemessage-square119fedilinkarrow-up1406arrow-down118file-text
arrow-up1388arrow-down1imageA Cool Guide: After I said “E as in egg” to customer service I looked up this guidei.redd.itcontentbot@lemmy.caB to Cool Guides@lemmy.caEnglish · 1年前message-square119fedilinkfile-text
minus-squaretiredofsametab@kbin.runlinkfedilinkarrow-up4arrow-down1·1年前E for egg isn’t even consistent throughout the English-speaking world. That vowel might be quite different in something like South African or Kiwi English compared to other dialects.
minus-squarejoby@programming.devlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up4·edit-21年前It’s not even consistent within the US. I’ve known people who, if they said that sentence over the phone it would sound a lot like “E as in A”
minus-squarezagaberoo@beehaw.orglinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·1年前It doesn’t need to sound the same though, as long as the listener can spell ‘egg’.
minus-squaretiredofsametab@kbin.runlinkfedilinkarrow-up1·1年前True but, for example, a younger me working tech support in the early 2000s would not have known what an ‘igg’ is to even try to spell it.
E for egg isn’t even consistent throughout the English-speaking world. That vowel might be quite different in something like South African or Kiwi English compared to other dialects.
Aigs?
Iggs!
Oh, eyren!
It’s not even consistent within the US. I’ve known people who, if they said that sentence over the phone it would sound a lot like “E as in A”
It doesn’t need to sound the same though, as long as the listener can spell ‘egg’.
True but, for example, a younger me working tech support in the early 2000s would not have known what an ‘igg’ is to even try to spell it.