Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Am I The Only One?
21 Answers
I've been listening to a lot of sports broadcasts this year and am astounded by the number of newsreaders and so called pundits referring to Colombia as Columbia. I'm sure they would kick up a fuss if somebody pronounced England as Englond. Has anyone else noticed this?
Answers
Yes I did cat....... And it's Scots not scotch.... that' s a drink ! Ggrr..
17:14 Fri 18th Jul 2014
Sorry Aquariel, I could not disagree more. It's a country for god's sake, not a trite aberration subject to personal preference, which by your inference rides rough-shod over the way the national population describes their national name. You might just as well say that if your name is Jane, its okay if I call you Joan. 'Personal preference' is a shallow excuse for not caring, or for general culpable ignorance. Murraymints knows exactly what I mean.
Just as Espana - la lala la viva espana ! - has an English name ( toponym I think ) Spain
Colombia does: ( I spose it would be a topophone ) pronounced Columbia
and Helleniky - yeah I pronounce that 'Greece' or perhaps 'Greek'
and yeah should we go back to calling Cairo - al gah-heera ?
No please not - the /q/ in Arabic is well a /q/ or a hard /g/ ( see above - a bit country dialect I'm afraid ) or a glottal stop /'/ depending on where you are ( in Egypt )
Colombia does: ( I spose it would be a topophone ) pronounced Columbia
and Helleniky - yeah I pronounce that 'Greece' or perhaps 'Greek'
and yeah should we go back to calling Cairo - al gah-heera ?
No please not - the /q/ in Arabic is well a /q/ or a hard /g/ ( see above - a bit country dialect I'm afraid ) or a glottal stop /'/ depending on where you are ( in Egypt )
how are you with Zhōngguó or Shqipëria?*
The Engish language has a name for every country, but it's not necessarily the same name, or the same pronunciation, as the locals use.
Having said that... when you actually see them in print, it's clear many people do think Colombia is Columbia. (Either way it's named after Christopher Columbus... whose name was actually Cristoforo Colombo in Italian and Cristóbal Colón in Spanish.)
*China and Albania
The Engish language has a name for every country, but it's not necessarily the same name, or the same pronunciation, as the locals use.
Having said that... when you actually see them in print, it's clear many people do think Colombia is Columbia. (Either way it's named after Christopher Columbus... whose name was actually Cristoforo Colombo in Italian and Cristóbal Colón in Spanish.)
*China and Albania
Well that's started something hasn't it?
No, I would never insist on calling Paris, Paree!
I know of no Colombian who calls his country Columbia. Even my Argentinean friends are surprised at our apparent basic disregard of the simple courtesy of differentiating between a 'U' and an 'O'.
Also, I would not insist on being that pedantic Graham-W, I take your point.
The two words are generally familiar enough to be above any language considerations. It's just that they are two different places. Not differentiating between the two to indicate which place to which one is referring, is just plain laziness.
No, I would never insist on calling Paris, Paree!
I know of no Colombian who calls his country Columbia. Even my Argentinean friends are surprised at our apparent basic disregard of the simple courtesy of differentiating between a 'U' and an 'O'.
Also, I would not insist on being that pedantic Graham-W, I take your point.
The two words are generally familiar enough to be above any language considerations. It's just that they are two different places. Not differentiating between the two to indicate which place to which one is referring, is just plain laziness.
It is and always will be COLOMBIA!!!! Columbia is a city in the USA, and British Columbia, I believe, is in Canada. Colombia is a large and very beautiful country in South America....many great cities....Bogota. Medellin, Cartagena, Cali, and Santa Marta, just to name a few.
Regarding pronunciation, how often do we hear the word "Escalator" pronounced as "Esculator"? Annoys the hell out of me!
Many well-known radio presenters guilty of this.
Regarding pronunciation, how often do we hear the word "Escalator" pronounced as "Esculator"? Annoys the hell out of me!
Many well-known radio presenters guilty of this.
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