[Opinions] Re: Leda / Letha
in reply to a message by Ottilie
Leda would only be pronounced with a "th" in Modern Greek, and it would be a voiced "th" (as in "those," "smooth," etc.). In Ancient Greek, the "d" would be pronounced like an English "d."
I adore Leda, but only if it's pronounced "LEE-ə." Letha is too close to "lethal" for me to appreciate it fully.
I adore Leda, but only if it's pronounced "LEE-ə." Letha is too close to "lethal" for me to appreciate it fully.
This message was edited 7/28/2015, 6:06 PM
Replies
Thank you for the clarification! I did wonder if there was a difference in this instance between Ancient and Modern Greek, as there often is, but I was a smidge too tired to research it.
LEE-də is growing on me a tad, though I'm trying to decide whether it really matters that it sounds almost identical to "leader" in my accent.
LEE-də is growing on me a tad, though I'm trying to decide whether it really matters that it sounds almost identical to "leader" in my accent.
I like Leda, but no one would pronounce it LEDH-uh (with the a voiced th), as you described.
Sorry, posted this in wrong place.
Sorry, posted this in wrong place.
This message was edited 7/28/2015, 8:12 PM
δ in Modern Greek is pronounced like a voiced "th" in English.
ETA: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Greek_phonology#Consonants
ETA: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Greek_phonology#Consonants
This message was edited 7/28/2015, 9:01 PM
I know about the "dh" consonant. Is the original poster in Greece?
Whoa...I think you've imagined me as scrappier than I intended.