How the heck to you pronounce this?!

*EDIT*
Now I'm interested in where this word is from....Does anyone know??? I've never seen it in any dictionaries and neither have several other posters.... Anyone?
*/EDIT*

It's been bugging me ever since I started really reading the rulebooks back in first edition five years ago....HOW IN THE HELL DO YOU PRONOUNCE DWEOMER?!

help me before I go mad, i beg ye! LOL
 
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Thanks P-kitty! I can rest easy now! :D I'm heading out to Boston for spring break with a few friends and me mum--any sights I should really make a point to see??? Any that I should avoid like the plague???
 

Technically, he's right, but don't let that stop you from pronouncing it like I do, as "dwee-OH-mur" (still rhymes with fur). I mean, honestly, True Dweemer sounds silly. Dwe-o-mer, at least, doesn't sound like 'dweeb.'
 

Speaking as one of the other Bostonians on the board...

The Museum of Science is pretty darn neat for all ages. Kind of light in some areas (as it's designed for the general public - otherwise they wouldn't make money!), but a lot of fun once you get into it. Plus the Omni Theater and Planetarium shows tend to rock, assuming you stay away from the kiddie programs. (Though I've heard good things about some of the kiddie programs at that.)

The MIT Museum is kind of small, but also nifty. They have the Hall of Hacks (a room containing a number of relics from the various practical jokes students have played over the years - including the fake police car that was found on top of the cupola one year, and the fiberglass cow that had appeared there a few years prior) and what I've heard is the world's largest collection of holograms. (Or at least they did the last time I was there.)

Plimoth Plantation is a bit out of the way, but worth visiting if you have the time. It's a living history museum recreating the original settlement and a Wampanoag (I hope I'm spelling that right) - local Native American - village. (The folks at the Wampanoag village dress authentically, but are never "in character," for various reasons.) You can also visit the Mayflower II on the shore of Plymouth proper, and see the Plymouth Rock.

The various trolley tours of Boston can also be quite enjoyable.

The Museum of Our National Heritage (I think that's what it's called) in Lexington (*sigh* - I *think*) is pretty neat. I haven't been there in a while, so I don't know what's there now, but I do remember that they always had interesting exhibits.

The New England Aquarium tends to be interesting as well, as are the whale watches that depart from that general area. If shopping's your thing, you've got to visit Faneuil Hall - heck, it's fun just to LOOK. I love their joke/novelty shops. For Cheers fans, there's the Cheers restaurant at Faneuil, and the Bull & Finch Pub some ways away. And I think that covers all the places I tend to favor.

Lessee...as for things you should avoid like the plague...well, I can't think of anything offhand. I would caution against the Tea Party Museum, which is pretty dorky; but if you don't mind silliness it can be fun.

Phew. Well, I've probably given you a case of information overload...but you DID ask. :) Just try not to laugh at our outrageous accents. (Oddly, I don't have one, but a lot of the people around here do.)
 

I've seen a dictionary definition of it with the pronounciation DWAY-mer, but wouldn't be surprised if Piratecat's version is more correct. It's an odd word.
 

Fun! The tour of the USS Constitution is really cool. Go to Faneuil Hall, which is all touristy stores (but cool), then walk out the back side past the Big Dig construction into the North End. It's old, Italian, and neat - great food, and at Copp's Hill Cemetary there are gravestones that were used for target practice by British soldiers during the revolution.

While downtown, if the weather is nice stroll through the back streets of Beacon Hill, or get run over by roller bladers along the Charles River Esplanade! I especially recommend taking a "duck boat" tour; the amphibious vehicle drives through Boston, and then right into the river (617-723-duck for info.)

Finally, if you don't mind driving for 45 minutes, Worcester has the Higgins Armory Museum, which is top-notch.

I found this list on the web; it has some good ideas, as well as some propaganda. :)

http://www.bostoncoalition.org/alcofree/101todo.htm
 



Nah - it's just that Boston's a REALLY interesting city, and Massachusetts in general is an interesting state. The places I've described are only the tip of the iceberg, and the fact of the matter is I still haven't visited a lot of places around here I'd like to see. (Such as Salem, which I don't think requires any explanation, and Fall River, home of our state's most notorious murderer - or should I say murderess? I also have yet to go on the Boston-area "ghost tours".) I'm hoping to see the remaining sights this summer; my "year off" has ended, the acceptance letters are starting to come in and I'll be leaving New England this fall. (Got accepted to Cornell College - different from the university - and got a nice little scholarship...I'm waiting to see what the other colleges have to say before making my decision, but they're all in the Midwest, so I'm pretty much outta here no matter what.)

But I'm sure Chicago's interesting too...really... *snort* *snicker*

(Nah, just kidding, of course.)
 

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