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What is the correct pronunciation of Uranus?
Is it Your-in-us?
Is it Your-anus?
Is it Oor-in-us?
Is it Oor-anus?
and why do the media try and change pronunciations? Is it to avoid insulting the public by saying anus?
No best answer has yet been selected by Greenbhoy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Dear Greenbhoy, I must apologise for an oversight on my part. Your request for further information made me look again at the relevant information, which revealed that Sir Humphrey originally - and briefly - called it 'aluminium' before he himself changed it to 'aluminum'! Sorry. The editors of the prestigious journal of the day, 'The Quarterly Review', changed it back to the 'iu' version. (Without so much as a 'by your leave', as far as I know!)
I cannot be certain, of course, how Sir Humphrey pronounced either word, but here's my guess. There is a chemical connection with the mineral 'alum' and that has no suggestion of a 'y' sound in it. I imagine, therefore, that the current American pronunciation - al-oo-minum (with a relatively light 'oo' sound) - is the closer to the original. Cheers. Apologies again for my error as to the words' age.