So like "Da-wun"?
Nope, just one syllable - D-awe-n.
So like "Da-wun"?
Oh, like "Don."![]()
I'd love to know how tay-lor and tailor are pronounced differently. To me, it's the same thing.
Though my friend from New Jersey did have to explain why Mary, marry and merry sound different. To this Californian, they're said the exact same way!![]()
TAY-lor vs tail-or...the first has a long 'A' and accent on first syllable. The 2nd has a short 'a' and no accent.
Jess
Interesting. I've never heard tailor pronounced with a short a sound. I'm curious, in what part of the country is it pronounced that way?TAY-lor vs tail-or...the first has a long 'A' and accent on first syllable. The 2nd has a short 'a' and no accent.
Jess
Hmmm...I'm still trying to understand this. I guess I've just heard Liz Taylor's name pronounced a certain way for many years. It would never occur to me to pronounce Taylor with a short a. So would that selective pronunciation rhyme with pallor?
Interesting. I've never heard tailor pronounced with a short a sound. I'm curious, in what part of the country is it pronounced that way?
Here its pronounced like tail-er. I have never heard it pronounce tAy- ler with a long A sound.
I have a niece who is Taylor. It's pronounced Tay-lor with the long A. With tailor said Tail and in a dog's tail and then the R sound following it.
Here its pronounced like tail-er. I have never heard it pronounce tAy- ler with a long A sound.
Here its pronounced like tail-er. I have never heard it pronounce tAy- ler with a long A sound.
Here its pronounced like tail-er. I have never heard it pronounce tAy- ler with a long A sound.
Um, tail DOES have a long A sound, otherwise it's tall
I did grow up in the South. This business of first syllables with pronounced L's on the end is a specifically Texan thing, to my mind, though I've heard it in Georgia, too. The example that sticks in my mind is Roger Miller on King of the Road: "Traail-er for saale or rent ..." The key is to roll out the long vowel that comes before the L and then clip hard before pronouncing the next syllable. If you don't kind of roll the long vowel you won't get the miniscule pause after the L.
It's really a very fine distinction, I'm not sure I would even call it a different pronunciation, just a different accent.