wiki
boolean
Dijkstra
Knuth
daemon
yes [nevermind this one]
wav file
gif file
any more common misprouncement clarifications welcome.
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wiki boolean Dijkstra Knuth daemon yes [nevermind this one] wav file gif file any more common misprouncement clarifications welcome.
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wiki - wick - ee boolean - bool - ee - un Dijkstra - Dike - struh Knuth - Kah - nooth (according to his homepage) daemon - day - mun yes (as in lisping or 'yeth') - huh? wav file - wave gif file - jif, like the peanut butter tiff - rhymes with gif |
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Wiki (rhymes with hickey) BOO-lee-in (no idea) DEE-mon (like the devil) (no idea) WAVE file GIF (like gift) file |
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Knuth = Kuh-Nooth with the emphasis on the second syllable Gif is a soft "G". Some time ago, I had read on a Unisys (patent holder) website that it was a hard G. All other references (including the original developer) say it is "J". |
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wiki - Vicky boolean - boolean Dijkstra - Dike-Straa Knuth - Nutth daemon - Dee-Mon yes - Yes!! wav file - vav gif file - jiff |
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GIF: Officially jiff, but everyone pronounces the G as in gill. |
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wiki - wɪki: boolean - bu:li:ɪn Dijkstra - daɪkstrʌ Knuth - nu:θ daemon - deɪmən wav - weɪv gif - ʤɪf tiff - tɪf |
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wiki - whick-y (without the 'h') boolean - boo lee un Dijkstra - dike stra (like "strum" a guitar, without the m) Knuth - nooth daemon - day mun yes - huh? wav file - wave gif file - jif, like peanut butter. tiff - rhymes with jif char - like charcoal (I've heard people pronounce it like care or car) SQL - Sequel (hey, at least I don't pronounce it squirrel). |
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wiki - wick-ee boolean - bool (like fool) + E (long e) + an or un Knuth - kuh-nooth daemon - demon wav file - wave file gif - I think the question here is if the G makes a g sound or a j sound? I go with the g sound myself. char - I pronounce it car. It is short for "character", which would suggest the ch be treated like a k sound, however it also might suggest that the a is long making the pronunciation like the word care. With no other vowels I don't think the a should be long, but the ch could still be treated as the k sound. This symbols pronunciation chart on Coding Horror might be useful to someone looking for the answer to this question |
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Daemon-- 'day-mon' and 'demon' are both in common use, but the latter is technically correct if you go by an English dictionary. For fun, see how your system's built-in speech synthesizer says it. (On the Mac, it's 'demon'; TextEdit -> Edit -> Speech -> Start Speaking). |
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wick-ee bull e an dykestra k-nooth dai-mon wave file jif (like the peanut butter!) |
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The real question is the spelling of Boolean, or, should I say, it's abbreviation. It's shortened to "bool" even though it's named after a man named "Boole". You'd think if you wanted to honor him, the least you'd do is spell his name right..... Another questionable pronunciation is "geocities", which is correctly pronounced "GEE-OH-cities". However, some prefer to say it "GEE-oss-ities". This led me to an idea about the problem of "gif". "gif" is correctly (according to it's creators) pronounced "jif". Many, however, prefer to say it with a hard G. My idea is to allow both pronunciations, one as the "correct", and one as the "trendy/ironic" version. "Geocities" can be viewed the same way. The most common example of this is the American department store "Target", where the correct pronunciation is "TAR-get", while the trendy pron. is (pseudo-French) "TAR-zhay" |
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knuth - noo-th |
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My native tongue is American English. If I know that a "word" is an acronym, I pronounce it as closely as possible to using the sounds as they appear in the words that are abbreviated. To whatever extent we can claim to be right by appealing to authority, I think English authorities largely agree that this is correct. Thus, I say GIF (for Graphic Interchange Format) with a hard G as in girdle not giraffe. The others are less informed: Dyke-struh K'Newth day-muhn The others seem to be ubiquitously agreed upon. |
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In made up names/symbols, I suppose there is no "good" pronunciation, only the one advised by the creator of the name, or the one of general consensus, although there might be schisms, like we see here for Gif. Not being native English doesn't help, some (French) colleagues persist pronouncing char as shar (that's kar for me), and I won't mention log-quatre-j (log4j!). I give here French-style pronunciation, for a change! ;-)
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Knuth, From his website:
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Disclaimer: I'm love Lain (she's hot and nerdy). I'm not affiliated with Tokyo TV, The Wired, or Apples' product placement division. But I do have the same weird sense of humor. |
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Here are IPA and phonetic pronunciations with sources (for ones I could find):
And here are opinions on ones I couldn't find a source for, or have opinions on:
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I used to pronounce SCSI skizzy for awhile before finally I gave in. |
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