View Message

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

[Opinions] Re: Honesty
With that spelling I feel two things; mostly that its pointless and will subject the kid to a lifelong "how to you spell that?". However, I also that it seems to be pushing a certain pronunciation. In England, we pronounce the "h" like HON-iss-tee (or if your common as muck like I am, it'd be ON-iss-teh) but Aunestie seems to force you to pronounce it a very American "AWN-iss-tee". So I can see why it might be used that way, to force a pronunciation Still, it seems pointless. I can't seem to find much on it, myself. Is it an alternate spelling or does it originate from a different source?

This message was edited 2/14/2020, 5:41 AM

Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

I doubt it's meant to make the preferred pronunciation clearer, because, I'm struggling to imagine an American pronouncing the H in honesty (so no reason to differentiate), the 'aun' would be more confusing if anything because some people pronounce 'aunt' like 'ant', and there'd be no reason to switch y to ie for pronunciation's sake. My guess is it's a creative spelling or an unintentional misspelling that caught on and became its own thing.
vote up1
I see some people pronouncing the "y" like "tay" and the "ie" forces "tee" but I don't know what accent that is
vote up1
I don't know. I can't find that information either. I just took the fact that when you Google it, things come up, to indicate that it's an established, if unusual, name, and not the complete neologism I'd thought it was.
vote up1