This just came up again. I see people doing it both ways. Which one is correct?

['ja:va]

or

['dza:va]

I have an observation that English-speaking cultures where J is read as [dz] use the second option, while those where J is read as [j] (German, for example) use the first option.

I personally prefer the second [dz] variant, since the term originated in English-spoken world. What do you use?

P.S. I absolutely need to know which one is right to obtain the serenity of mind.

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are you serious ? – Tempus May 24 '09 at 20:07
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If knowing this is what you need to obtain serenity, I fear you are doomed to a troubled life. – Brian May 24 '09 at 20:08
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Not everyone here speaks the same native language. – DOK May 24 '09 at 20:10
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interesting question although not directly programming related. J in the English language (which is a Germanic descended language) was the last letter added to a English alphabet, even in old german words like jear became year in English. so y became the german J sound when Anglo saxon moved from runic to latinized alphabet. That said, Java is an island in Indonesia, and pronounced with the dz sound, the coffee that comes from there give another common used name, and that is where java comes from. It should be noted in the same idea mono is commonly mispronounced because of its Spanish orig – DouglasH May 24 '09 at 21:08
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Not just the "J", but what about the first "a"? In this podcast with James Gosling basementcoders.com/?p=721 the host pronounces it as in "have" rather than "jar". Is this a regional thing? I have never heard it pronounced like this. – Paul Richter Sep 29 '10 at 11:16
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4 Answers

I had an Indian lecturer at university who pronounced it the same as those little robed dudes from Tatooine in Star Wars.

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+1 for making me laugh. – Robert Harvey May 28 '09 at 2:52
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So how did those little robed dudes pronounce it? – Jeanne Pindar May 20 '10 at 21:37
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It's pronounced like the alternate word for "coffee."

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/java

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http://www.howjsay.com/index.php?word=java: dz

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It depends on which language I am speaking when using the word. When speaking English, I use the English 'J'-sound, and when speaking Swedish I use the German-style 'J'-sound (which happens to be the same in Swedish). When in Rome...

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