View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Opinions] Re: Harry
in reply to a message by Katie
Why not Henry nn Harry? *cries*Harry Reginald, Harry George, Harry Christopher.Ugh it just seems like an adjective next to any MN's. Sell Henry nn Harry on her. Please.
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

Ew.A "hairy reginald" just sounds disgusting. Bleh. Oh no. I sincerely am home alone just laughing my head off at that.
vote up1
L. O. L. !
vote up1
It sounds so lewd, doesn't it?...and I'm actually deleting my message because it sounded a bit too vulgar, despite not meaning anything.

This message was edited 4/5/2008, 7:38 PM

vote up1
It sounds lewd to me because it's a cross between "regiment" and "genital." Gesticulation also sounds awkward to me because it is genital + sticky + masturbation.I also feel very silly giggling about this on the internet D:
vote up1
What adjective does Harry sound like? I don't get it...
vote up1
Hairy.
vote up1
Really?It must be the accent or something...Harry and Hairy sound absolutely nothing alike in my accent.
vote up1
In the North it doesn't sound like Hairybut down here it is Hairy and my sister Sarah is Saira. Up north he is Harry and she is Sarah, as it should be - but to me it is "hairy." Very very much.Still, it seems like an adjective that is v. close to Harry in the north accent, IMO at least.
vote up1
I'm from the Northeast. I understand how Harry could sound like Hairy, but to me they sound distinctively different.Harry = Hah-ree (like, the beginning of the word "half")
Hairy = Hayhr-ee (rhymes with bear)
Sarah = Sah-rahFunny how it varies so much from region to region, not just country to country!
vote up1
Sarah and Harry sound completely different in my accentI say Sarah like SARE-ah (rhymes with HAIR-ah :-p) and Harry with the short a like the a in attic. HA-ree and SAIR-ah.How does the pronunciation of Sarah vary from north to south?
vote up1
The a in attic sounds likethe a in Harry to me. What does the a in attic sound like to you?Pronunciations in different accents confound me.Sarah and Harry both have a sound like "hair" in my ear.
vote up1
Its a short a, like at-tic whereas the a in Sarah is long, like SAIR-ah. Harry is a short a as well, like HA-ree. I really need to record myself saying these and then post it...*runs to phone to record it*http://smg.photobucket.com/albums/v643/poetic_freedom/Photos/?action=view¤t=06-04-08_1651.flvOkay that is me saying Sarah, attic, Harry and hair.
vote up1
Just to addThat is a video file because that's all my phone does and I don't know how to convert it to just a sound file. There is only sound on the video though, no image
vote up1
What does the a in attic sound like to you?Like the A in apple, cat, Radcliffe, yak, etc.Hairy, though--more of an "ay" sound, you know?Array
vote up1
This Northerner says no, it does.It's in the East that they say Haarry, like the A in attic. That sound doesn't exist before the letter R in Midwestern accents. ^^;;Array (her sister is a SARE-uh, too)
vote up1
North-east, then.In my family we refer to northeast as "north" because it's directly above us.edit: incorrectly. We refer incorrectly.

This message was edited 4/5/2008, 8:08 PM

vote up1
Ditto, they sound totally different in my accent...but on TV it's always "hairy". *shrug*
vote up1
In the US they're almost identicalHence Seamse's Streets play on words with "Hairy" Monster.
vote up1
Not even 'almost' for me.They're the same word phonetically when I hear/say them.
vote up1