Words are hard!

steeldragons

Steeliest of the dragons
Epic
Ooooo, there's a good one...

"penanggalen"...is that "pen-ANG-galen"..."pen-ANG-jel-in"..."pen-ANJ-ahl-in"..."PEN-ang-gall-in"...or "PEN-anj-guh-lin"?

Don't think there's a right answer for that, but if anyone has an official reference please let me know...I've never known/understood what to call that...

--SD
 

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AeroDm

First Post
I always read and pronounced justiciar as "JUST-ih-car" until I learned it's "ju-STIH-she-er". Who knew! (Probably lots of people.)

Well crap. At what point is it acceptable to just decide I'm going to continue pronouncing something wrong.
 
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prosfilaes

Adventurer
I actually like that it is called Sigil instead of Sijil. It adds to the "WTF" weirdness of the city and is a reminder that you are not on the Prime Material world.

Plus I think it's dumb when people try to relate the city to the word sigil (sijil) just because it is spelled the same.

It's generally considered a good thing that pronunciation is predictable from spelling. Even you act as if sijil gives some indication towards the pronunciation of sigil. Personally, I'm rather tried of people who have no idea of linguistics trying to create a fantasy or science fiction feeling by throwing around random letters.
 


Plane Sailing

Astral Admin - Mwahahaha!
It's generally considered a good thing that pronunciation is predictable from spelling.

I don't think english got the memo!

Now cyrillic languages - absolutely right. Give me a page of serbian and I can read it perfectly (without any comprehension) because it was developed so that pronunciation was predictable from spelling.
 


I don't think english got the memo!

Now cyrillic languages - absolutely right. Give me a page of serbian and I can read it perfectly (without any comprehension) because it was developed so that pronunciation was predictable from spelling.
Absolutely - when I was learning Spanish it was the same way. And I suspect many languages are like that. But English has a serious legacy issue here. Many words are spelled the way they are because of how someone decided they "should" be spelled centuries ago. But even if said spelling was accurate back then, pronunciation has changed and we've failed to update the spelling. I believe "knight" made some sense phonetically, when that spelling was settled upon. No longer.
 

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