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  3. Indian English and a matter of tense

Indian English and a matter of tense

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csharpquestion
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  • H hairy_hats

    Nishant Sivakumar wrote: I knew that was coming Couldn't let a good feedline go to waste. ;P

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    Nish Nishant
    wrote on last edited by
    #29

    viaduct wrote: Couldn't let a good feedline go to waste. Yeah, I understood :-D

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    • N Nish Nishant

      Nishant Sivakumar wrote: The 'r' is silent. But it's not pronounced like ion. iron is pronounced more like i-ern

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      Bob Stanneveld
      wrote on last edited by
      #30

      That sounds like scottisch or the silly english that you hear in pirate movies... Behind every great black man...             ... is the police. - Conspiracy brother Blog[^]

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      • C Christian Graus

        As someone of German heritage, I've seen first hand that people learn a new language word by word, and then translate using the tense that feels right to them. On another front I was listening to a German metal band yesterday and they have a song called 'Iron Force', but every time he sings it, he emphasises the r in 'iron'. It made me laugh, anyhow. Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++

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        CP Visitor
        wrote on last edited by
        #31

        Christian Graus wrote: On another front I was listening to a German metal band yesterday and they have a song called 'Iron Force', but every time he sings it, he emphasises the r in 'iron'. It made me laugh, anyhow. The singer of a metal band doesn't know how to pronounce 'Iron Maiden'??? :omg:

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        • B Bob Stanneveld

          That sounds like scottisch or the silly english that you hear in pirate movies... Behind every great black man...             ... is the police. - Conspiracy brother Blog[^]

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          Nish Nishant
          wrote on last edited by
          #32

          Bob Stanneveld wrote: That sounds like scottisch or the silly english that you hear in pirate movies... eye-ern sounds silly to you? So, you pronounce it as i"r"on? (pronouncing the r as in ironic)?

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          • C CP Visitor

            Christian Graus wrote: On another front I was listening to a German metal band yesterday and they have a song called 'Iron Force', but every time he sings it, he emphasises the r in 'iron'. It made me laugh, anyhow. The singer of a metal band doesn't know how to pronounce 'Iron Maiden'??? :omg:

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            Nish Nishant
            wrote on last edited by
            #33

            CP Visitor wrote: The singer of a metal band doesn't know how to pronounce 'Iron Maiden'??? Since when have metal band singers pronounced other band-names correctly :-)

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            • N Nish Nishant

              Giles wrote: I like the fact that you can swear every other word in a sentance and still make sense. Though I don't do it too often. Yeah that's fun ;-)

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              Giles
              wrote on last edited by
              #34

              You must have heard of Jive? Its an interpretation of English I suppose. But the words all mean different things, and well its a good example of extream acts of wrongness in languagification. http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/jbc/home/chef.html[^]


              "Je pense, donc je mange." - Rene Descartes 1689 - Just before his mother put his tea on the table. Shameless Plug - Distributed Database Transactions in .NET using COM+

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              • H hairy_hats

                Giles wrote: Then there is the pronaounciation, and the fact that there are lots of words that sound the same but mean different things..... There, Their, They're Which, Witch Where, Were, Wear 'Where' I am, Where, Wear and Ware are pronounced the same; Were isn't (sounds like 'Whirr')...though maybe that's just a UK thang... ;-) My favourite English spelling quirk has to be 'ough' - different sounds in Cough, Bough, Though, Through, Thought must confuse the hell out of non-native speakers. Steve.

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                Giles
                wrote on last edited by
                #35

                You're not my wife are you? As she keeps telling me!!!!!! :laugh:


                "Je pense, donc je mange." - Rene Descartes 1689 - Just before his mother put his tea on the table. Shameless Plug - Distributed Database Transactions in .NET using COM+

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                • N Nish Nishant

                  Bob Stanneveld wrote: That sounds like scottisch or the silly english that you hear in pirate movies... eye-ern sounds silly to you? So, you pronounce it as i"r"on? (pronouncing the r as in ironic)?

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                  Bob Stanneveld
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #36

                  I dont pronounce the r as in ironic, but I don't pronounce it like eye-ern either... I put the emphasis on the 'o' like iron. Well, what can I say, I'm dutch.. :-D Behind every great black man...             ... is the police. - Conspiracy brother Blog[^]

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                  • B Bob Stanneveld

                    I dont pronounce the r as in ironic, but I don't pronounce it like eye-ern either... I put the emphasis on the 'o' like iron. Well, what can I say, I'm dutch.. :-D Behind every great black man...             ... is the police. - Conspiracy brother Blog[^]

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                    Nish Nishant
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #37

                    Bob Stanneveld wrote: I put the emphasis on the 'o' like iron. But then it'll resemble ion, won't it?

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                    • G Giles

                      You must have heard of Jive? Its an interpretation of English I suppose. But the words all mean different things, and well its a good example of extream acts of wrongness in languagification. http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/jbc/home/chef.html[^]


                      "Je pense, donc je mange." - Rene Descartes 1689 - Just before his mother put his tea on the table. Shameless Plug - Distributed Database Transactions in .NET using COM+

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                      Nish Nishant
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #38

                      Giles wrote: _http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/jbc/home/chef.html\[^\]_ That site's very unresponsive!

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                      • N Nish Nishant

                        Bob Stanneveld wrote: I put the emphasis on the 'o' like iron. But then it'll resemble ion, won't it?

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                        Bob Stanneveld
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #39

                        No, you still hear the 'r'. It's like in the word featuring, where you don't put the emphasis on the r, but you still hear it when you prenounce the word. Behind every great black man...             ... is the police. - Conspiracy brother Blog[^]

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                        • N Nish Nishant

                          Vikram A Punathambekar wrote: That's ironic. Ouch!!!

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                          Matt Gerrans
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #40

                          If you think that's irony, then you must subscribe to the Alanis Morissette interpretation of irony. Matt Gerrans

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                          • C CP Visitor

                            Christian Graus wrote: On another front I was listening to a German metal band yesterday and they have a song called 'Iron Force', but every time he sings it, he emphasises the r in 'iron'. It made me laugh, anyhow. The singer of a metal band doesn't know how to pronounce 'Iron Maiden'??? :omg:

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                            Christian Graus
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #41

                            ROTFL - that's a good point, I didn't think of that. Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++

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