BusyLizzie
Registered Shopper
Received a letter once from a Richard Sole.....signed R Sole!
Cleopatra's had her sister murdered it seems. I watched a documentary last year and they pronounced the name as R seen Oway, the a was silent.
Wouldn't that still sound the same?:mysmilie_17:
Not if the R is short, as the R in Red, for example.
Fascinated (in a car crash way) how some people mesh accents in the worse possible way. Thinking here of my local golfers Graeme McDowell (cringeworthy) and to a lesser extent Rory McIllroy.
Others spring to mind - Lulu, The Skagen woman who speaks English with an American-Danish accent, the Bronzo Italiana woman American-Italian etc. Then there's Kathy (Kanga ?) with that skin care brand (name ??)
I'm amused how it became trendy to take quite normal names and add y or i in the oddest places, spoken the same but written looks like a foreign language.
I would love to have the opportunity to study how accents happened, particularly in colonised countries. And also why some people can live in a country for 3 or 4 times more than in their country of birth and hardly lose their accent whilst others can visit for a long weekend and come back home with an accent!! Fascinated (in a car crash way) how some people mesh accents in the worse possible way. Thinking here of my local golfers Graeme McDowell (cringeworthy) and to a lesser extent Rory McIllroy.
There used to be one in Bude called Dr Blood.
They used to tell you to be sure that Christian name and surname worked together. They didn't seem to take into account the fact that once married that put the spanner in the works. In a lot of cases that wouldn't apply now as even if married many females keep their own names.
Does anyone have an example of really bad name combinations.
The doctor who delivered me was Dr Brain and my husband wanted me to mention a headmaster of his Isaac Hunt (!)