Wednesday, June 09, 2010

voilà

Where do people get the idea that the French pronounce voilà as "wah-lah"? Are they confusing French with German? But even in German, the "v" doesn't sound like a "w": it's pronounced like an "f."

And while I'm at it:

The expression coup de grâce is not pronounced "koo duh grah." See that "e" on the end of grâce? That means you pronounce the "c" right before it: "koo deu grahss."

The word gras, pronounced "grah" in French, is usually an adjective meaning "fat," but can also be a noun signifying fatness, fatty tissue, etc. The mispronunciation "koo duh grah" calls to mind a well-endowed woman crushing my skull by whipping her torso at my face.

Ah, sweet fantasy...


_

3 comments:

  1. I'm sorry - you've assumed that Americans are not ignorant. Oops!

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  2. And yet, Germans with strong accents sometimes pronounce "v" as "w" when speaking English. At least, this has been my experience. I've always been puzzled by this, and the best I can come up with is that since "w" sounds like "v" in German, they are applying the same logic backward and assuming that "v" will sound like "w". I don't know, though.

    Anyway, do people really pronounce "voilà" as "wallah"? Has it been that long that I just don't remember?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Charles,

    Yeah, I heard "wallah" on a TV show just the other day.

    Good point about Germans speaking English.


    Kevin

    ReplyDelete

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