[Facts] Re: Muriel / Mariel and English dialects
in reply to a message by Lumia
Standard (BBC newsreader) British (when in the UK I pass for a posh native!) definitely distinguishes them. It's Muriel with a You, or Mew like a cat, and Mariel either Mare- like the female horse or Ma-ree-el, with a very short final syllable and the first vowel like the one in At and Cat. In fact, when I say it, it's Ariel, like Sharon, with an M.A lot of people seem to dislike the Muriel version, so it could well be that Mariel isn't so much a confusion of sounds as a conscious avoidance. I think Mariel sounds much better, though Muriel belonged to two beloved relatives so I've got no bad associations.
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Messages

Muriel / Mariel and English dialects  ·  Lumia  ·  3/3/2008, 1:47 AM
Re: Muriel / Mariel and English dialects  ·  Cleveland Kent Evans  ·  3/4/2008, 10:51 AM
Yes, probably it is a historical situation  ·  Lumia  ·  3/5/2008, 1:45 AM
Muriel in Ireland  ·  Lumia  ·  3/11/2008, 3:19 AM
I think the link is going to slowly change, though  ·  Siri  ·  3/4/2008, 1:24 PM
Thank you very much you all  ·  Lumia  ·  3/4/2008, 3:17 AM
Just to clarify ...  ·  Anneza  ·  3/4/2008, 4:58 AM
Re: Muriel / Mariel and English dialects  ·  Anneza  ·  3/3/2008, 10:24 PM
Re: Muriel / Mariel and English dialects  ·  Elena  ·  3/3/2008, 9:42 AM
Re: Muriel / Mariel and English dialects  ·  ClaudiaS  ·  3/3/2008, 6:45 AM
Re: Muriel / Mariel and English dialects  ·  Kate  ·  3/3/2008, 10:25 AM
Re: Muriel / Mariel and English dialects  ·  penguiny7  ·  3/3/2008, 6:22 AM
American East Coast Dialect...  ·  Siri  ·  3/3/2008, 3:42 AM
Clarifying  ·  Siri  ·  3/3/2008, 3:44 AM
Re: Muriel / Mariel and English dialects  ·  Poppylena  ·  3/3/2008, 2:57 AM