How to pronounce tricky food names

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  • Опубликовано: 27 май 2024
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Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @byme.9183
    @byme.9183 3 года назад +933

    I’m starting to think this guy lives in Macon, Georgia

  • @MrCrow2014
    @MrCrow2014 4 года назад +2295

    Title: how to pronounce tricky food names
    Adam: this is not a guide on how to pronounce various potentially challenging food names

    • @SNitro
      @SNitro 4 года назад +77

      Lol. Although the topic of the video is a lot more interesting than I expected

    • @Fenderbenne
      @Fenderbenne 4 года назад +27

      he did answer how to do it though. "How?" - As close as you can with your native sounds :v

    • @subhasish-m
      @subhasish-m 4 года назад +9

      Well he laid out a framework for pronouncing tricky food names, which is what the title is referring to, rather than listing specific examples, which is what Adam's opening statement was referring to, so I think they're both right

    • @KayramirCF
      @KayramirCF 4 года назад +6

      He's a master of subversion

    • @SimpleVisionVideos
      @SimpleVisionVideos 4 года назад +2

      He did explain the native pronunciations for his examples though

  • @runninggag5
    @runninggag5 4 года назад +501

    "May I have a croissant?"
    "Uh do you mean a KHWASSON?!"

    • @GpD79
      @GpD79 3 года назад +59

      That's when it's obnoxious... when someone corrects you. Especially if they're not native to the language.

    • @bittersweet8816
      @bittersweet8816 3 года назад +2

      @@GpD79 I have no idea if you're joking.

    • @GpD79
      @GpD79 3 года назад +51

      @@bittersweet8816 Nope, totally being serious. Someone who goes out of their way to correct another person's pronunciation, especially when the pronunciation is acceptable, is obnoxious.

    • @Dan-vr7zs
      @Dan-vr7zs 3 года назад +41

      I could have dropped my KHWASSON

    • @jakovhrga5619
      @jakovhrga5619 3 года назад +6

      Imagune getting angry at learning something I-

  • @Artuditu123
    @Artuditu123 4 года назад +468

    "Worcestershire sauce" - I always go with "british fish sauce"

    • @41A2E
      @41A2E 3 года назад +13

      That's harder for me to pronounce, like a tongue twister!

    • @dimitrijepenjaskovic9374
      @dimitrijepenjaskovic9374 3 года назад +36

      Britfish sauce

    • @user-tn8rl1lc8l
      @user-tn8rl1lc8l 3 года назад +9

      Wohshteshuh sauce

    • @TBlev215
      @TBlev215 3 года назад +9

      Woo-stir-shear.

    • @TheRoboteer
      @TheRoboteer 3 года назад +9

      Wuss-tish-er
      Wuss-ter is also acceptable

  • @FouneDeCombat
    @FouneDeCombat 4 года назад +280

    "There is no institutional authority that gets to say what is right and what is wrong"
    *Laughs in French Academy*

    • @83hjf
      @83hjf 3 года назад +9

      Real Academia Española too

    • @Deh9o11en8or
      @Deh9o11en8or 3 года назад +21

      despite what they claim they also don't get to do that

    • @aimeecortez5899
      @aimeecortez5899 3 года назад +7

      Laughs in Accademia della Crusca

    • @pandaboy52
      @pandaboy52 2 года назад +9

      They think they get to but they're undertaking a fool's errand lmao

    • @henriqueprado9205
      @henriqueprado9205 2 года назад

      Laughs in Academia Brasileira de Letr... wait they don't do that here

  • @Aaron-pv8vm
    @Aaron-pv8vm 4 года назад +106

    I just purposefully mispronounce every cooking-related word so that people think it's a joke to hide the fact that I don't know how to pronounce a lot of words.

    • @patrickgono6043
      @patrickgono6043 4 года назад +11

      "war chester shire sauce" *wink wink*
      [god I hope they don't actually ask what the correct pronunciation is]

    • @rinhayashi7685
      @rinhayashi7685 4 года назад +2

      Afonso Verissimo I pronounce it like wore-shh- ter-sure sauce.

    • @JoPeTuYaTroJoueY
      @JoPeTuYaTroJoueY 4 года назад +2

      works everytime.

    • @mabamabam
      @mabamabam 4 года назад +3

      @Afonso Verissimo wooster sauce

    • @frankyi8206
      @frankyi8206 4 года назад +1

      "If they think you're being an idiot on purpose just for laughs, they'll never think you're an idiot when you don't actually know" - my philsophy. And sometimes it works

  • @groumoun328
    @groumoun328 4 года назад +223

    As a French, we don't pronounce McDo as "Mac Doo". The 'o' is pronouced in a similar way as in "let's go".
    Just wanted to clarify, because the way Adam pronounced it sounded super weird.

    • @dananskidolf
      @dananskidolf 3 года назад +32

      It did make me laugh hearing that. I'd assume he'd only seen it written?

    • @charleahar
      @charleahar 3 года назад +19

      I did a french exchange program in highschool and was very confused when the french students suggested "on peut manger a MagDo..." and we ended up in a McDonalds.
      And that's the story of how I ended up eating american fast-food within my first week of going to one of the culinary centers of the world.
      Sidenote: Y'all have very clean McDonalds.

    • @kaldo_kaldo
      @kaldo_kaldo 3 года назад +1

      @@charleahar I really wonder what people experience when they comment on McDonalds outside of the US. I've been to McD's in multiple countries and they're clean, yeah, just like the ones I've been to in the US.

    • @charleahar
      @charleahar 3 года назад +2

      @@kaldo_kaldo my experience with McDonalds in the US has often been poorly-lit, with booths with their stuffing popping out of cracks in the vinyl. They don’t sweep as often as they should so there are stepped-upon piles of French fry mush under the tables
      It’s not necessarily “dirty”, but it doesn’t feel inviting, it doesn’t feel comfortable, you kinda just want to get out of there.
      In France, the buildings were very well lit, well maintained, and they very clearly swept up the spilled French fries, and washed down tables frequently. It wasn’t white tablecloth, but it really wasn’t a bad experience to sit down with your friends for a while, enjoy your royale, and chat and chill out.

    • @kaldo_kaldo
      @kaldo_kaldo 3 года назад +1

      @@charleahar Hmm, if I had to guess, those probably don't have involvement from McDonald's corporate. The one in my hometown (which I worked at for a year) was very well lit - the entire lobby was windows, and tons of electric lighting too. There were a few lobby staff who would clean up after customers immediately when they left. The chairs were all in good shape, nothing broken or worn down.
      But every month, we had someone from the McDonald's corporate office inspecting our store to make sure it met their standards. It's not compulsory for franchise stores to do this, so I imagine that's the main difference.

  • @heylittleguy26
    @heylittleguy26 4 года назад +361

    Ragusea's Law: Exists*
    Bilingual people: *confused screaming

    • @aragusea
      @aragusea  4 года назад +117

      As I said, "native dialect or dialects."

    • @ToveriJuri
      @ToveriJuri 3 года назад +15

      Not really. you pronounce things differently depending on which language you are using. This authenticity nonsense is irrelevant.

    • @MmmVomit
      @MmmVomit 3 года назад +45

      Where can I find the recipe for Ragusea Slaw?

    • @MarianaGarcia-lj7lc
      @MarianaGarcia-lj7lc 3 года назад +19

      idk whenever I'm speaking English I anglicize all non anglo words. and when I'm speaking Spanish I Castilianize them all not Castilian words. but my mom dose that pompous pronouncing everything "correctly" thing and it pretty annoying

    • @thisuniquechica
      @thisuniquechica 3 года назад

      MmmVomit 😂

  • @alexricky87
    @alexricky87 4 года назад +739

    Adam's goal for pronunciation: don't sound like a tool
    Seconds later: Ragusea's Law
    Jk

    • @EZboyrocks
      @EZboyrocks 4 года назад +17

      * RrrrrrraGUUUsea's Law

    • @ladybooog
      @ladybooog 4 года назад +14

      He did sound like a tool with that one though.

    • @bigchum3984
      @bigchum3984 4 года назад +1

      youre right on that account though.

    • @alexricky87
      @alexricky87 4 года назад +3

      @@ladybooog I just thought it was funny that was his goal but he was told enough to create a "law" in his name. I think that was done on purpose

    • @ladybooog
      @ladybooog 4 года назад +3

      @@alexricky87 Guy's been on the map for a year or so. If it was a joke, you don't render your "first draft of manifesto" down to nearly zero with a badly executed joke, but I could be taking this way too seriously as well, so "you do you my friend" :D

  • @spencerj
    @spencerj 4 года назад +363

    This is the higher level cultural distinction that I need more of in my life. I feel like you get either side of the scale of your video in most discussions of language and culture.
    On one end, you get people who say it’s splitting hairs to discuss the differentiations of the pronunciations of Gyro. On the other end, you get people talking to 100-year-old grandmother’s from Greece as an unyielding authority on the singular correct pronunciation of Gyro, as if they’ve tracked down and solved an unanswered mystery.
    Adam, I appreciate the middle line you found with this content. You are educating viewers on various cultural nuances while refusing to declare any one of these cultures as the supreme owner of any one word. I think that’s a really nuanced and well thought out take, and I feel like I walked away from this video learning a new outlook on food pronunciation and culture. Thank you

  • @joshuazhong2520
    @joshuazhong2520 3 года назад +91

    Can I just point out that the "made-up" example at the beginning is totally supposed to be "white wine"

  • @PhantomSavage
    @PhantomSavage 4 года назад +790

    I'm from Texas. I pronounce tortilla like Tor-TEA-yah.
    My girlfriend is from New Jersey. She pronounces it like Tor-TILL-ah.
    It drives me insane.

    • @jamesanthony5874
      @jamesanthony5874 3 года назад +36

      I'm third generation Zony. My dad pronounces it TOR-til-la. I'm not entirely certain he doesn't do it just to annoy me in particular though.

    • @Sergefisun
      @Sergefisun 3 года назад +148

      As somebody from Jersey, she absolutely does that to annoy you. We pronounce it the same way you do

    • @dracothegreat1950
      @dracothegreat1950 3 года назад +8

      Turtle AAHHH

    • @mm-yt8sf
      @mm-yt8sf 3 года назад +12

      i always use "yah" because i was traumatized when god-zee-yah fought with the giant gor-ee-yah and destroyed my city :-)

    • @katyungodly
      @katyungodly 3 года назад +33

      The letters “illa” in Spanish is pronounced “EE-yah”, there is no debate to the pronunciation unless you’re ignorant.

  • @shikaleo224
    @shikaleo224 4 года назад +295

    Adam once again with the smoothest transition into the sponsor of day, silky as butter my friend

    • @VandrothSoryn
      @VandrothSoryn 4 года назад +12

      Yeah but we still fast forward 30 seconds when we realize it

    • @pramodhpriyawardana9526
      @pramodhpriyawardana9526 4 года назад +2

      I didn’t even see it coming 😅. I always enjoy them

    • @anoarkorol3895
      @anoarkorol3895 4 года назад +1

      Micidiale Adam, micidiale.

    • @765respect
      @765respect 4 года назад

      I have never watched a commercial, I ff them.
      He got me listening and turning my phone around to look at the potential.

    • @intensiveplastic
      @intensiveplastic 4 года назад +1

      That’s been my game watching his videos now: finger on the button all like “ok wheres he gonna slip it innnnnn.....there it is.” *fast forward*

  • @strengthman600
    @strengthman600 4 года назад +277

    “There is no institutional authority that dictates how we speak language”, L’academie Française: “allow me to introduce myself”

    • @i_dont_want_to_give_google3742
      @i_dont_want_to_give_google3742 4 года назад +41

      Real Academia de la Lengua Española has joined the chat.

    • @rangergxi
      @rangergxi 4 года назад +14

      Don't most French people ignore them at this point?

    • @Frag-ile
      @Frag-ile 4 года назад +10

      Svenska Akademien is here to work upon the Swedish language's "purity, strength and sublimity"

    • @johnpatrickgonzaga5899
      @johnpatrickgonzaga5899 4 года назад

      Is that french academy? I'm just assuming

    • @rangergxi
      @rangergxi 4 года назад +20

      @@johnpatrickgonzaga5899 It's a government body that regulates the French language. It was originally created to enforce Parisian French on France.

  • @guscox9651
    @guscox9651 4 года назад +125

    level -1 pronunciation: Facebook mums saying "merci" in the Italian restaurant

    • @kaldo_kaldo
      @kaldo_kaldo 3 года назад +3

      Mum: Mercy.
      Waitress: Signore dammi forza
      Mum: Thank you

    • @Karma-qt4ji
      @Karma-qt4ji 3 года назад +10

      @@kaldo_kaldo When I am in a Spanish restaurant, I always say "muchos". It means a lot to them.....

    • @JETZcorp
      @JETZcorp 2 года назад

      @@Karma-qt4ji This joke is criminally underrated.

  • @ThePikminMaster6523
    @ThePikminMaster6523 4 года назад +123

    "There is no institutional authority that dictates how we speak language"
    Real Academia Española: Allow us to introduce ourselves.

    • @Banom7a
      @Banom7a 4 года назад +9

      and if you live in Québec: Office québécois de la langue française

    • @Trawpenia
      @Trawpenia 4 года назад +7

      "NO ONE EXPECTS THE SPANISH INQUISITION!!!"
      oh wait...

    • @arii414
      @arii414 3 года назад +6

      I don't follow the RAE, it's too Spain centered. An example: The word "eximirse" is very used in Chile and other south american countries and they took it out of the dictionary because "it's not used any more". When I asked them about it they said: it's still in the "Diccionario the americanismos". Wtf? Why there is a kind of exceptions-dictionary for America when the majority of the world spanish speakers live here?

    • @jackjephson8171
      @jackjephson8171 3 года назад +1

      @@arii414 I get what you mean it is not as inclusive as it could be but its a good base for the formal tounge anyway. It does include a lot of the Argentinan verb differences tho I have been told

    • @LaughterCigar
      @LaughterCigar 3 года назад +1

      @@arii414 Por curiosidad, qué significa "eximirse"? Cuando lo busco en google solo salen los resultados de "eximir", que sí está en la RAE y sí se usa en España.

  • @Laittth
    @Laittth 4 года назад +1220

    There's that and people pronouncing "tortilla" with an L sound.

    • @GrandHighGamer
      @GrandHighGamer 4 года назад +222

      Okay I'll say 'torteeya' but I'm also going to pronounced godzilla as 'godzeeya'. This is what you have wrought.

    • @gabrielm5724
      @gabrielm5724 4 года назад +15

      honestly to god never heard anyone say 'tortiLA' before haha but yeah I would get pretty triggered at that

    • @bloodgain
      @bloodgain 4 года назад +36

      I say torTILLa, but I do it ironically with a cartoonishly Southern drawl. And never in front of anyone who speaks Spanish.

    • @damplamp
      @damplamp 4 года назад +11

      @@daiinginside9845 Gradius' comment was clearly a joke

    • @illwill1991
      @illwill1991 4 года назад +8

      @@daiinginside9845 yeah dude I'm just trying to order some food and rent a movie. When I'm walking up to the counter at my local Mexican restaurant I'm not thinking about "the linguistic differences between our 2 cultures". I'm actually thinking about "oh shit did I leave my back door open?" I mean yeah I've never said tor-till-a but when I hear someone else say it i don't think of them differently. People have lives! They have jobs and kids to raise! Some Americans see 2 L's in a word and say tor-till-a and that's fine because they have other more important responsibilities to be thinking about then if they pronounced that word right. I'm lucky enough to have known the pronunciation of that word before seeing the spelling but other people aren't.

  • @hjelpmegpaaisen7815
    @hjelpmegpaaisen7815 4 года назад +238

    There hasn’t been a “shocking secret” recipe in ages. I’m scared for when it happens

    • @sk8erin8er
      @sk8erin8er 4 года назад +33

      that’s the trick. if they’re released too often you won’t be shocked.

    • @lilly_koii
      @lilly_koii 4 года назад +10

      he's saving up for a megaphone to use for when he goes NO!!!

    • @RamenNoodle1985
      @RamenNoodle1985 4 года назад

      I still want to know what exploded in his oven that he tweeted about a few months ago.

    • @peter_smyth
      @peter_smyth 4 года назад

      White wine, it's always white wine.

    • @nidium1951
      @nidium1951 4 года назад +1

      NO! The easiest way to get a "shocking secret" recipe is to patiently wait and LET IT BOIL!

  • @SlugKingsly
    @SlugKingsly 4 года назад +1433

    "I don't wanna sound pompous"
    *names a law after himself*
    EDIT: Holy hell none of you seem to get that this is a joke. I don't actually think he's pompous. Congrats to everyone trying to make me seem dumb, you played yourselves

    • @FA-yi1vt
      @FA-yi1vt 3 года назад +8

      Do people not normally do that?

    • @tolga1cool
      @tolga1cool 3 года назад +6

      @@FA-yi1vt Nope. Generally they are named after the person is dead to honour them

    • @jm-lc3jp
      @jm-lc3jp 3 года назад +5

      I hope you're joking. It's not pompous to try and explain things in a memorable way. It sounds like you've never been introduced to the shorthand.

    • @SCP--rj8hm
      @SCP--rj8hm 3 года назад +5

      m wooosh

    • @danialrizvi1523
      @danialrizvi1523 3 года назад +21

      r/whoosh to most people here

  • @devandevan1403
    @devandevan1403 4 года назад +172

    This cooking channel is slowing becoming a philosophy channel. Eventually we’ll be discussing the existential problems of the universe.
    Slowly, but surely.

    • @maxliu7576
      @maxliu7576 3 года назад +9

      what’s the meaning of life?
      well it might be squarespace, the online...

    • @barvdw
      @barvdw 3 года назад

      on a simmering fire? I let myself out

    • @Bouzsi
      @Bouzsi 3 года назад

      Would that trouble you?

    • @poopertin11
      @poopertin11 3 года назад

      All good for me. I enjoy philosophical questions!

    • @isaiahayers1550
      @isaiahayers1550 Год назад

      @@poopertin11 I'm fascinated by philosophy myself but as of late have often found it frustrating if you're actually using it to find real truth in the world and/or the best way to live a "good" life. Whatever that means. It seems to be that truth finding especially is perhaps impossible due to the immense complexity of life and the limited senses and brainpower we possess.

  • @benich36
    @benich36 4 года назад +141

    French people don't say "Macdew", but more something like "mac dough", a short phonetic version of Macdonald.
    Source: Am french

    • @JoPeTuYaTroJoueY
      @JoPeTuYaTroJoueY 4 года назад +4

      je confirme ;)
      everyone can try with a TTS website, and just type "je vais manger au MacDo" : ttsreader.com/fr/

    • @Sarsanoa
      @Sarsanoa 4 года назад +5

      The "o" sound in French sounds closer to the English "oo" than the English "oh" I think, but I agree it's definitely not the diphthong "ew", at least for the accents of French and English that I'm familiar with (Source: am Canadian)

    • @SE4GY7
      @SE4GY7 4 года назад +5

      Yeah my french friend says something like "Mack-doh" with equal emphasis on the mack and the doh

    • @tingo2123
      @tingo2123 4 года назад +3

      Try Australian for McDonalds: “maccas”

    • @MoooseBlood
      @MoooseBlood 4 года назад

      We need more proof that you are in fact am French.

  • @SophoricDeathcry
    @SophoricDeathcry 4 года назад +223

    Adam literally has the smoothest ad transitions I've seen xD

    • @mawrk4049
      @mawrk4049 4 года назад +9

      Then you haven’t seen LinusTechTips :3

    • @jadelock302
      @jadelock302 4 года назад +6

      The moment I realized it was an ad I went "oh you crafty fckr"

    • @leechyfruit4464
      @leechyfruit4464 3 года назад

      @@jadelock302 I only noticed when he said it

    • @tinopavlat659
      @tinopavlat659 3 года назад

      You should see babish

    • @thatoneguywiththevoice328
      @thatoneguywiththevoice328 3 года назад

      It is just as smooth as that clckr stand and grip he was using

  • @thenedoriiistewardofrondog6965
    @thenedoriiistewardofrondog6965 3 года назад +18

    "We don't have the flap," almost immediately flaps t in 'that're'

    • @YeetusTheFetus
      @YeetusTheFetus 2 года назад

      we do have the flap, it comes when we say words quickly, like the double t in “butter”

    • @JETZcorp
      @JETZcorp 2 года назад

      @@YeetusTheFetus It's different though; when we say "butter" it just comes out like budder, rhymes with udder and shudder (and "another", if you're Joe Pesci). It's just a D.

  • @Spabobin
    @Spabobin 4 года назад +60

    when I worked at Wendy's someone asked me for a side of juh-LAP-a-nose. (jalapenos)
    I was completely floored

    • @41A2E
      @41A2E 3 года назад +1

      @@yozul1 Yeah, I alternate between "ha-lah-pen-ohs" and "ja-lap-en-yos"

    • @HoratioAccel
      @HoratioAccel 3 года назад +3

      @@41A2E please do not pronounce it with a "j" lmao

    • @41A2E
      @41A2E 3 года назад +6

      @@HoratioAccel You can't tell me what to do! >:(
      Besides, I say it correctly when I'm ordering at a restaurant or something, I just say it stupid as a joke when I'm around friends or whatever.

    • @elderrusty541
      @elderrusty541 3 года назад +4

      Went full on Ricky didn’t he?

    • @Karma-qt4ji
      @Karma-qt4ji 3 года назад +6

      That's nothing. Just after I got divorced I had my kids with me for the weekend and we went to a barbeque at a friend's house. Was chatting to this really nice lady I met there, who seemed to be as interested in me as I was in her. Casually, my 3 year old son walked up and started telling her about how I was growing a "yellow penis". 17 years has now passed and I still cringe when I think of that moment XD

  • @danielcordero4070
    @danielcordero4070 4 года назад +157

    We got it boys, a thumbnail of Adam Ragusea that has a "bruh" on it

  • @Badenhawk
    @Badenhawk 4 года назад +148

    College humor does an awesome video called "that guy who over pronounces words" or something like that. It's great.

    • @awid1338
      @awid1338 4 года назад +4

      That is a good video

    • @kaziiqbal7257
      @kaziiqbal7257 4 года назад +5

      That’s all i could think about through this

    • @DylanCoteActor
      @DylanCoteActor 4 года назад +6

      the MUUZARELL sticks

    • @aaron74
      @aaron74 4 года назад +2

      That video is amazing!

  • @CrimsonPhantom88
    @CrimsonPhantom88 3 года назад +33

    I mean I call "salad dressing" "veg sauce" so I've pretty much ascended beyond even being able to discuss food with anybody.

  • @JETZcorp
    @JETZcorp 3 года назад +11

    Okay, can we all agree that this was the smoothest ad transition ever made, by a RUclipsr who's already known for them? Jesus Ragusea, that was greased silk.

  • @FingeringThings
    @FingeringThings 4 года назад +182

    “Kinowa”
    Me, an intellectual: *Kinwa*

    • @stalin2618
      @stalin2618 4 года назад +4

      Your name. Your Channel

    • @L_T34
      @L_T34 4 года назад

      That's how I first heard it pronounced

    • @burgerpatty
      @burgerpatty 4 года назад +2

      LMAOOO PUTTING THE CHECKMARK BEHIND YOUR NAME DKSKSKDKSKSKS-

    • @giancarlojosueolmedoromana573
      @giancarlojosueolmedoromana573 4 года назад

      That's much closer to the original. There is no proper 'o' sound in quechua

  • @CuriousFrog
    @CuriousFrog 4 года назад +142

    McDonald's also embraces being called Maccas in australia, the app is even called "mymaccas"

    • @lucasbittencourtnogueira5858
      @lucasbittencourtnogueira5858 4 года назад +3

      in brazil it's "méqui" where mé has the same sound as 'me' in 'meth' and 'qui' has the same sound as 'key'

    • @kai_nems
      @kai_nems 4 года назад +3

      Giving something a nickname has nothing to do with mispronounciation

    • @CarlosGarcia-ze6rt
      @CarlosGarcia-ze6rt 4 года назад +1

      In Spain we sometimes say "macas". And it's also kinda embraced by the company on social media

    • @CuriousFrog
      @CuriousFrog 4 года назад +4

      @@kai_nems ? you didn't watch the video before commenting i guess

    • @grim-z9527
      @grim-z9527 4 года назад

      @CuriousFrog Same In New Zealand

  • @user-he1rn5uu5w
    @user-he1rn5uu5w 3 года назад +29

    My way of pronouncing names:
    If I am in Japan, try my best to pronounce it the way the Japanese do, even if I cannot do it perfectly. At least I tried my best effort.

    • @Karma-qt4ji
      @Karma-qt4ji 3 года назад +1

      Agree completely, but I do draw the line on trying to mimic the accent.

    • @KyrieFortune
      @KyrieFortune 3 года назад +11

      @@Karma-qt4ji yeah no, imitating the accent is actually a key component if you want to pass Japanese exams

    • @y.bowcat7782
      @y.bowcat7782 3 года назад

      @@Karma-qt4ji japanese isn't as loose as english, all spellings are phonetic with very little wiggle room so if you don't nail down the accent you'll probably be misunderstood a lot

  • @siddheshdhomane7642
    @siddheshdhomane7642 Год назад

    I love the way how balanced your words are.

  • @barbocovers
    @barbocovers 4 года назад +206

    French people don't pronounce it "McDoo", it's more "McDough"

    • @Astor_V
      @Astor_V 4 года назад +27

      To be a little bit more precise, since it's just the shortened version of "McDonald's", we naturally pronounce the "do" as it is pronounced in the complete name, just without the ending.

    • @angeloniromance7003
      @angeloniromance7003 4 года назад +3

      Such lazy people you know

    • @Pekara121
      @Pekara121 4 года назад +7

      yeah we here in germany call it "Mecces". well at least the young people.

    • @JoPeTuYaTroJoueY
      @JoPeTuYaTroJoueY 4 года назад +7

      je confirme, on raccourci en "MacDo" et "Do" sonne "Dough" chez nous ;)

    • @SuperKrusty68
      @SuperKrusty68 4 года назад +2

      yo les fr

  • @lillankan555
    @lillankan555 4 года назад +60

    Adam: I need something to hold up my phone
    *grabs a yam*

    • @jsgwam
      @jsgwam 4 года назад +1

      Or maybe a *SWEET* *POTATO*

    • @TMThesaurus
      @TMThesaurus 4 года назад +2

      He heard about somebody yammering on their phone and misunderstood the meaning

  • @lucyshnyr5647
    @lucyshnyr5647 19 дней назад

    “Ragusea’s law” 😊 is about the best way to handle this topic regardless of where you live on this planet! Respect.

  • @tinibari456
    @tinibari456 4 года назад

    Thank you, this addressed some of my concerns I had about different brand names, and it was done with sufficient nuance. Really, good video.

  • @ionalien
    @ionalien 4 года назад +71

    I think it's tough when you are bi-lingual/cultural. It feels weird trying to skirt around "sounding like a tool" when you really just want to say something the way you know it.

    • @artemiswoodfin1590
      @artemiswoodfin1590 4 года назад +2

      So relatable

    • @DrachenYT
      @DrachenYT 4 года назад +13

      My perspective is that if the people you're talking to are aware that you're biliingual or multicultural, they won't (or at least shouldn't) think you're sounding like a tool if you're speaking to be authentic. They'll have the context of knowing that you have more credibility in the matter since you are culturally-related or linguistically learned in that way. I think the pompousness is more for those who have no sort of connection to something yet since they "know" the correct way, they inflate their sense of worth by using the "proper" way to pronounce things, despite falling behind in intelligibility and, ironically, authenticity.

    • @rh9909
      @rh9909 4 года назад

      Drachen That's so relatable. People are always being so kind when they do want to communicate, since that's why we sometimes desperately tried to, eh, communicate. So whether we manage to find a workaround in that language, or they being considerate in understanding our smashing into it, which usually they do.

    • @janfieseler9824
      @janfieseler9824 4 года назад +11

      German here, when I talk to my American friends and use German names, I find myself subconsciously using American pronunciations. It's really funny. I don't do it on purpose, but it's part of code-switching I think. When I'm in "English mode", I sometimes even pronounce my own damn name differently from how it's actually pronounced.

    • @ofsabir
      @ofsabir 4 года назад +1

      @@DrachenYT I totally agree with you but unfortunately some people around me are not kind enough to not think that I am a prick who tries to create an impression of superior intelligency over them when I pronounce things "correctly" in other languages.

  • @bobbler42
    @bobbler42 4 года назад +210

    I believe the French pronounciation of “McDo” has a shorter “o”: “Mac-Doh”.

    • @ngc4260
      @ngc4260 4 года назад +2

      bobbler42 yeah basically.

    • @viis
      @viis 4 года назад +5

      You're correct

    • @joachimverheijden8845
      @joachimverheijden8845 4 года назад +3

      probably, but that is not a sound that americans use and therefor he pronounces it differently

    • @viis
      @viis 4 года назад +20

      @@joachimverheijden8845 I suppose, but to be honest it just sounds ignorant to mispronounce it if he's going to deliberately point how how the French say it

    • @bobbler42
      @bobbler42 4 года назад +2

      Joachim Verheijden Homer may be giving you sideeye…

  • @pandaboy52
    @pandaboy52 4 года назад +1

    Adam this is easily my favorite video of yours, and I love most of your videos. I'm a massive language nerd and your approach to this is truly excellent. I've never seen someone describe my own opinions to me and put words to my gut feelings so succinctly. Excellent, EXCELLENT work!
    For reference, I say something like "euro" or "yeero," I say "brushetta," and I say "bolo-nay-zay" or "bolo-naze." Born and raised in southwest Ohio :)

  • @o0Avalon0o
    @o0Avalon0o 4 года назад +12

    I was doomed from the start. The first computer "game" I played was a thesaurus that would pronounce words on a click, had occasional pictures like a lion that would roar on click, & had an extensive & descriptive content.

  • @ART1E057
    @ART1E057 4 года назад +147

    he definitely made this bc of everyone roasting his pronunciation of gyro in that video
    edit: oop just got to the part of the video where he mentions it lmao

    • @johninitaly
      @johninitaly 3 года назад

      Ha ha ha , here in Italy when we call a gyro (which I grew up pronouncing aw jī-rō) is called a kebab and is considered Middle Eastern.

    • @dirozx
      @dirozx 2 года назад

      Do you really not watch the whole video before commenting lol?

  • @Minuano420
    @Minuano420 4 года назад +38

    "One of which... is ME!"
    What a plot twist.

  • @ThatRandomGamerrz
    @ThatRandomGamerrz 4 года назад

    As both a huge language nerd and a foodie, this video greatly pleases me. Kudos, Mr. Ragusea.

  • @justagent5844
    @justagent5844 4 года назад

    thanks again Mr. Ragusea, I enjoy your videos

  • @moominfin
    @moominfin 4 года назад +80

    I find Ragusea's law comes quite naturally to me living in Finland. Foreign (mostly english) media, product and company names are everywhere to the point where you develop an innate feel for how they are pronounced "in finnish", just like you do for native words, except with a different ruleset.

    • @zAsKaA
      @zAsKaA 4 года назад +3

      mul on naik hattu ja meen nyt mäk donaldsii

    • @Preinstallable
      @Preinstallable 4 года назад

      Good Rapman pompous ass

    • @pekeeeh
      @pekeeeh 4 года назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/GIxKfXKGBGU/видео.html This sums up pretty well our mentality.

    • @Rudenbehr
      @Rudenbehr 4 года назад

      Good Rapman Boku wa fin go ni hanasemasen

    • @leimuh
      @leimuh 4 года назад

      mäkkäri

  • @bered4894
    @bered4894 4 года назад +39

    1:00 when he said „teezesikai“ I felt that

  • @mikek4025
    @mikek4025 4 года назад +1

    I think it's cool what sponsors you decide to choose

  • @nathanbrittin7301
    @nathanbrittin7301 4 года назад +5

    Workouts look to be going well! Those biceps are popping out of that sweater!

  • @walterclements8661
    @walterclements8661 4 года назад +116

    lol i feel i have taken part in the creation of this one

    • @danielcordero4070
      @danielcordero4070 4 года назад +4

      Your profile picture is one of the best I have ever seen.

    • @aoqe
      @aoqe 4 года назад

      Same here I called him out in the bolonaise the way he does

  • @Travislow55
    @Travislow55 4 года назад +50

    "That's a made-up word!"
    "All words are made up!"

    • @Ozz527
      @Ozz527 4 года назад +2

      “I understood that reference”

    • @lordkiza8838
      @lordkiza8838 4 года назад

      Tick uh muss allah

  • @demonhellfish
    @demonhellfish 4 года назад +1

    A shift from [g] (the in English ) to [j] (the in English ) is actually not unique to the growth from ancient to modern Greek. It's an instance of "palatalization", which is the tendency to move the place your tongue goes while speaking to more often pass through the center-most region (namely, near the hard palate) because that tends to happen any time you move from a sound at one end off the mouth to a sound at the other end. Many parts of Anglo-Saxon also got palatalized as they grew into Modern English.

  • @Lagiacrusguy1
    @Lagiacrusguy1 4 года назад +14

    Honestly Adam, I am a bit hungover right now, and I decided to watch a few vids before starting on my uni work. I cannot stress how much I value your channel. Videos like this are just great, thank you for teaching me to cook - helping my family and making my friends happy - and thank you for creating just great quality informative videos.

  • @abhinavgunturi100
    @abhinavgunturi100 4 года назад +51

    Can we take a moment to appreciate how comfortable and expressive Adam is on camera? While other RUclipsrs are either monotonous or over-expressive, Adam is able to talk about literally anything while keeping our attention through raw writing and speaking skill. Probably comes from his journalism background.

    • @HelloHello-vk5ob
      @HelloHello-vk5ob 3 года назад +3

      @Ferd Dorst only idiots call others autistic

    • @ecco2ks
      @ecco2ks 3 года назад

      @Ferd Dorst ok Fred Dorst

  • @aidansgrandsonsfather2730
    @aidansgrandsonsfather2730 4 года назад +57

    When faced with a tough question like, “How do I pronounce *blank*?”, just remember WWTBD. What would the brits do?

    • @amyshaw893
      @amyshaw893 4 года назад +16

      drink tea and take over every country they can see, i think

    • @dodgy9213
      @dodgy9213 4 года назад +1

      Matthew Shaw lol

    • @Orynae
      @Orynae 4 года назад +16

      How to pronounce zucchini? courgette

    • @Badenhawk
      @Badenhawk 4 года назад +4

      They take Worcestershire sauce and call it Wooster.....so I will not take their advice.

    • @anonimushbosh
      @anonimushbosh 4 года назад +1

      Badenhawk It’s actually wuster (but you do you)

  • @Your_Conscience.
    @Your_Conscience. 4 года назад

    There is an approach you have to cooking that's really refreshing to see. There is no way this doesn't translate through your life.
    A form of jeet-kun-do even. People in general can learn a lot from this channel therefore not exclusive to cooking.
    Keep it up Adam !

  • @ezekielaguilar4694
    @ezekielaguilar4694 3 года назад

    Great job on this video, big fan. I hope to see more of these types of videos in the future between your usuals. Don't let the lower view count discourage you from making more of these!

  • @Orynae
    @Orynae 4 года назад +110

    Yeahhhh French people do not say "McDoo", lmao. It's "McDo", with a "do" like in "do re mi" (similar to "dough").

    • @Topaztan
      @Topaztan 4 года назад +12

      McDo(ugh) makes way more sense than the Australian version of McDonald's which is "Macca's" 😂. McDo just sounds like you're shortening it, which I think is common in a lot of languages. Even American English.

    • @Dagger-th2ik
      @Dagger-th2ik 4 года назад

      Really? I always thought it was McDo as in door

    • @joecal2360
      @joecal2360 4 года назад

      Yeahhh French people don't say McDough lmao. There's no 'w' sound at the end of McDo, like there is in the English word dough.

    • @molseren
      @molseren 4 года назад +5

      Mcdonalds Abbreviatons in various cultures are fascinating,
      Yo have McDo in France, Maccas in Australia, Maccen in Denmark, a bunch of others ive forgotten. All have been recuperated by mcdonalds in their respective countries to be used in marketing.

    • @brinken3034
      @brinken3034 4 года назад

      Swedish people say "Donken" :)

  • @phoenix-mc2tr
    @phoenix-mc2tr 4 года назад +39

    Damn, i was waiting for "Thüringer Klöße".

    • @hubertblastinoff9001
      @hubertblastinoff9001 3 года назад +2

      There's a song. If you mention them, you are contractually obligated to mention the song...

  • @Chocobi._._.
    @Chocobi._._. 3 года назад

    Love how you think about these things

  • @stardustpan
    @stardustpan 14 дней назад +1

    Your attitude to food translates pretty well to linguistics too :)
    I'd just challenge the idea that company names or product names would be exempt from language users doing whatever the heck they want. Speech sounds in use can't be copyrighted

  • @SesameBagel.
    @SesameBagel. 4 года назад +19

    I was just showing my father how great of a cook you were! He just followed you!

  • @overheaven8684
    @overheaven8684 4 года назад +56

    I learned how to say Italian dishes from JoJo part 5

  • @MarkDeGenova
    @MarkDeGenova 3 года назад +2

    I absolutely agree with your point here. I'm also a 3rd Generation Italian-American. I got a much better sense of just how different Italian-American is from Italian food and culture when I had the opportunity to visit the old country. While the food in Italy was amazing, it was very different from what I was used to at home. Furthermore, I even got told that I pronounce my own last name wrong. The way that my family said my last name has been slowly "Americanized" over the generations, and when I went to Italy, people would correct me and tell me how it should be pronounced in Italian. But, back home, I still use the Americanized pronunciation of my last name. I'm not really an Italian, I'm an Italian-American anyways, it's who I identify with more strongly than anything else. Maybe even switch that around to "American Italian" to really highlight that I'm an American first.

    • @jayteegamble
      @jayteegamble 2 года назад

      German-American and i was told that i pronounce my name wrong when visiting Germany.

  • @SHAKE320
    @SHAKE320 4 года назад +1

    fantastic case-thanks for the discount

  • @Alex_dlc
    @Alex_dlc 4 года назад +39

    An addendum to Raguseas Law: Just look it up. For example, there's so many people that complain about not knowing how to pronounce "worcestershire" but at the same time are unwilling to do a quick Google search for the correct way to pronounce it. It literally takes less than 10 seconds and it's actually not hard to say at all if you just listen to someone say it correctly.

    • @LARKXHIN
      @LARKXHIN 4 года назад +1

      Right. "Guys, I'm sorry, I'm an idiot" just look up the damn word and try it.

    • @thatthinker
      @thatthinker 4 года назад +5

      I want you to look up how to pronounce Worcester PA and Worcester Mass. "Looking it up" means picking an authority on pronunciation. I don't live in England, so why should I try to sound like someone from the Lea & Perrins company? Remember goal 3, don't sound like a tool. Worcestershire is admittedly easier to do this for, but then there's examples like Adam gave that use sounds outside of other folks' normal language(s) or dialect(s).

    • @ryancamcam
      @ryancamcam 4 года назад +1

      Just call it "Wooster" and be done with it

    • @aragusea
      @aragusea  4 года назад +1

      Except there are multiple ways of pronouncing that one. There is an established American pronunciation and it ain't "Wooster."

  • @januscher7877
    @januscher7877 4 года назад +43

    Gordon Ramsay be like:
    SHÅLOTS

  • @mat2468xk
    @mat2468xk 3 года назад +3

    "Tee-zat-zih-ky." DAMN IT, ADAM! LMAO.

  • @michaelgallo6593
    @michaelgallo6593 3 года назад +1

    It’s cute how you speak Italian American as a Southerner.

    • @michaelgallo6593
      @michaelgallo6593 3 года назад

      To be fair, the Internet is full of videos on how to say these “correctly” in Italian. But none in Italian-American. So you’d really have to be there.
      Except for this one: ruclips.net/video/qcp8rN-YqLw/видео.html

  • @bleetblue
    @bleetblue 4 года назад +5

    This channel has changed sooooo much since I subscribed!. It’s so much more interesting and interactive! Keep up the great work Adam!

  • @vm360fly
    @vm360fly 4 года назад +29

    11:13 ''There is no institutional authority that gets to say what is right and what is wrong!'' - Laughs in Académie française

    • @alexandersmurr-ferrer7713
      @alexandersmurr-ferrer7713 4 года назад

      hahaha exactly what I was thinking

    • @idndyzgaming
      @idndyzgaming 4 года назад

      The Badan Pengembangan dan Pembinaan Bahasa Republik Indonesia: silently observing in Jakarta

  • @FullNarutoIdiot
    @FullNarutoIdiot 4 года назад

    I agree! I like your draft alot!

  • @janetmackinnon3411
    @janetmackinnon3411 Год назад

    Interesting, as your videos always are. Thank you.

  • @ghoster3334
    @ghoster3334 4 года назад +39

    polish people: pierogi
    any existing life in milky way: pIeRoGiS

    • @kahorere
      @kahorere 4 года назад +1

      Came here to comment that! Like I don't blame them, especially given the letter ó in the singular, but it sounds so jarring!

    • @guyfromphotostock
      @guyfromphotostock 4 года назад +1

      Вареники

  • @grat2010
    @grat2010 4 года назад +3

    Your ad transitions are so smooth, I often replay them just to witness their brilliance again.

  • @dmanzawsome
    @dmanzawsome 4 года назад

    Ive thought of all the social rafications of different pronounciations too. Glad to know there was someone else who thought about. I agree with most ur point good job

  • @aroundlife5369
    @aroundlife5369 4 года назад +2

    this really helps us to make a beautiful food vlog. thank you so much for your amazing tricks. 😊😊😍😍

  • @raulendymion9917
    @raulendymion9917 4 года назад +36

    Using this video as a guide, could you show us how you'd pronounce certain dishes?
    I imagine you'd have to account for history, culture, and present pronunciations but it'd be real fun! Especially if it can turn into a teaching moment for your kids: maybe get them on camera and see how they'd choose to say words, whatever your family'd be comfortable with.

    • @dukeofasg3280
      @dukeofasg3280 4 года назад +2

      He probably would do it if it weren't for the religious foodies who cry heresy everytime they see something that they think is wrong, case in point comments under his Gyro video.

    • @tissuepaper9962
      @tissuepaper9962 4 года назад

      The whole point of this video is that there is no one correct way to say any word. The only valuable measure of "correctness" is intelligibility, and there's a very, very wide array of different way to say a word and still be intelligible.
      He said at the beginning, this isn't a guide.

  • @Rsmall103
    @Rsmall103 4 года назад +25

    This is tough on the other side of the Chef's Counter too. I love drawing influence from other cultures when designing menus, but there's a certain expectation of knowledge, including correct pronunciation, when someone is paying you a decent chunk of change to make their meal.

  • @alexandersmurr-ferrer7713
    @alexandersmurr-ferrer7713 4 года назад +11

    In France "McDo" is pronounced more like "Mac-Doh" rather than micdoo.

  • @TheMimiSard
    @TheMimiSard 3 года назад +1

    I am reminded of a non-food-related example that my mother came up against with a friend she had for a while. During the 90s (I was a teen then) Mum became friends with a woman who joined our church, maybe a few good years younger, divorced with two pre-teen sons. But she was a Victorian and Victoria has a few dialect differences to other states, including a pronunciation of "castle" as closer to "kessel" than "car-sl" that NSW favours. Why is this significant? We were living in NSW and both she and Mum had plenty to do with our church's single people's club (for widows and divorcees) and one of the bigger branches of it was the Newcastle branch. FYI, Newcastle is a city north of Sydney, one of the bigger NSW cities, used too be a metal refining centre, had an earthquake in... '89? I think? As Mum held, calling Newcastle "New-kessel" to a resident's face would be insulting, because they call it "New-car-sl".
    So I think that fits into your paradigm of "Do people own it?" because as Mum held, and I agree, residents have first rights on how the name of their town or city is pronounced. I also think the second string is how state news broadcasts call it, in the case of a city like Mackay, which can be called the way it looks, but I most often hear it called in rhyme with "eye" on the second syllable, on QLD evening TV news.

  • @daddysuburban1029
    @daddysuburban1029 4 года назад +4

    That was the smoothest transition to an ad that i have ever seen!

  • @vincentbecker7850
    @vincentbecker7850 4 года назад +17

    Damn that new kitchen is looking really dope

  • @KeiFlox
    @KeiFlox Год назад

    I think Adam has my favorite segues into sponsor segments, they almost always either catch me off guard or make me chuckle, always so well tied in to the video in general. I really appreciate that--I know sponsors and ads are going to happen, may as well be amused :)

  • @bjerk1881
    @bjerk1881 3 года назад +1

    Wow this has to be one of the smoothest transitions you-NEY! Anyone has ever made. Well done, sir.

  • @heidirichter
    @heidirichter 4 года назад +11

    McDonalds is commonly referred to here in Australia as "Maccas" - so much so that Australian McDonalds stores and their Australian web site use that as well.
    I have one for you, I've noticed that people in the United States of America pronounce "herb" as "erb", dropping the H entirely. When asked, the common response is that it's a french word and thus they attempt to use french pronunciation, which apparently also drops the H.
    But here in Australia, and I believe at least in some regions of the United Kingdom, it's pronounced with the H, kind of like "Her-b". I know I have always pronounced it with the H, as does everyone around me in Australia. It may be a french loanword, but we are speaking English, and more specifically here we are using our Australian English language dialect rules, shaped by their own unique evolution and influences - from a later "version" of English from the late 1700s until about the 1960s directly from the UK, but also coloured by waves of immigration from what is now Germany with German speakers (producing the "Barossa German" dialect of German predominantly spoken in the Barossa Valley region of South Australia) and influencing the dialect of English spoken in the South Australian capital city of Adelaide to this day, which has a distinct sound which is noticeably closer to the pronunciation of words in German.
    I believe (and I could be wrong, as I'm no expert), at least in Australia, this German influence has had an impact upon how we pronounce some words - such as "herb", where we tend to use more of the German language pronunciation rules, where letters are more likely to not be silent - at least from my limited Deutsch sprache.
    Which is correct, with or without the H? Well, as much as it sounds "odd" to me to hear it without the H, I understand that it sounds equally as odd to people to hear the H if they're not used to it - so in a way, both are correct in their own regions. It is my understanding that this is how languages evolve - old English diverged in this way from the other North Sea Germanic languages, one of which went on to become modern German, with a number of changes occuring in both languages over time as they drifted apart, to the point that the two only share a few mutually intelligble words.

    • @Brandon-vo3cb
      @Brandon-vo3cb 3 года назад +3

      To add another level of wtf to the US, plant herbs are pronounced with a silent h like you said, but Herb, an old-timey male name, has a pronounced H sound.

    • @EvlNabiki
      @EvlNabiki 3 года назад

      But herb is from the Latin herba...

    • @timseguine2
      @timseguine2 3 года назад +2

      Your theory about German influence on the word "herb" is a bit shaky. The Germanic word is "Kraut", but interestingly enough the German slang for McDonalds is similar to the Australian you mentioned: Meckes (2 syllables)
      There is a lot of overcorrection with foreign words though, so maybe you are partially right. For example the loanword guillotine was pronounced with an L sound in French when it was adopted into English. But in modern French it is more similar to an English Y which has caused a trend among English speakers to insist that is the correct English pronunciation as well.
      The moral is, someone is always going to take issue with however you pronounce foreign words.

    • @TheMimiSard
      @TheMimiSard 3 года назад

      @@timseguine2 It might not be the specific word for herb but the over-all treat of the letter H as a first letter in German words that had an effect.
      Personally I didn't know German migrants had an effect on it, and my own family is very English-Scottish-Irish in background, with my branch not being the South Australian branch of my maternal grandfather's family.
      If anything, I think German influence - if that is part of the reason - is further back and more likely a side effect of the Hanover Dynasty, all the way through to Saxe-Coburg Gotha family's influence on the royal line. If he royal family say things one way, it's probably filtered down, especially as modern media grew up through Queen Victoria's reign.

    • @jayteegamble
      @jayteegamble 2 года назад

      Herb was pronounced without the H at the time the USA broke away from Britain (similar to hour, honor, heir, etc). The British later started pronouncing it with the H.

  • @ImyaSmol
    @ImyaSmol 3 года назад +30

    Actually-- American English does have flap, usually wherever you see "tt" (Butter, etc), also words like "water".

    • @HelloHello-vk5ob
      @HelloHello-vk5ob 3 года назад +1

      Well thats the flap T but we dont have the flap R. Similar but different sounds

    • @ImyaSmol
      @ImyaSmol 3 года назад +9

      @@HelloHello-vk5ob They're the same unless I missed something becoming a linguist. Both should be the alveolar flap '/ɾ/'

    • @egafx
      @egafx 3 года назад +4

      wa'ah

    • @xmrun
      @xmrun 2 года назад

      @@ImyaSmol I don't think the word "water" is pronounced with a flap r

    • @ImyaSmol
      @ImyaSmol 2 года назад +1

      @@xmrun In standard Americam pronunciation, it is.

  • @daniz64
    @daniz64 4 года назад +1

    Where I live in Canada we don’t really say gyros at all, we call it a donair (dough-Nair). And just in case you were wondering: donair poutine.... so good!

    • @eechauch5522
      @eechauch5522 4 года назад

      But that’s a different dish, at least it should be. To be fair, what he showed was way closer to a Turkish Kebab we call Döner in Germany, so I guess somebody stole the German word and brought it to Cananda. They are two different things though, gyros is Greek and usually pork, while Kebab/ Döner is Turkish and usually veil. Both can be cheaply made with chicken, but that’s beside the point.

  • @jackdillon7565
    @jackdillon7565 3 года назад +1

    hey i really love your videos! I love how informative and well thought out and researched they are, you clearly put in your work. just to nitpick one thing though, American English does have a tap/flap sound, it's in words like butter and ladder, that tiny "d" sound in the middle.

  • @mitainepasdpouce
    @mitainepasdpouce 4 года назад +62

    Why would I do this when I could just mispronounce everything and make people irrationally angry?

  • @sonimatic
    @sonimatic 4 года назад +19

    My body recoiled when you said "JAI-row".

    • @PandaXs1
      @PandaXs1 4 года назад +3

      have you never heard of a gyroscope??

    • @zeno.7519
      @zeno.7519 4 года назад

      Also, a lot of people pronounce Gyro as "Jy-roh", including me. And yes, I know Gyro are pronounced as "Yee-roh" or "Gee-roh", but I'm more comfortable to pronounce Gyro as "Jy-roh"

    • @lwilton
      @lwilton 4 года назад +1

      @@zeno.7519 I recall being in Taco Bell once and hearing someone at the drive-thru ordering "two take-ohs".

    • @felixargyle1285
      @felixargyle1285 4 года назад

      @@zeno.7519 no you pronounce gyro like that because of steel ball run caesar

    • @illwill1991
      @illwill1991 4 года назад

      Yeah well maybe you should get over yourself then. Most people including Greek Americans say "jai-ro".

  • @markschiller5596
    @markschiller5596 4 года назад

    Gotta love the intellectual/philosophical food videos. They're the best!

  • @evansaravia253
    @evansaravia253 3 года назад

    Such a smooth sponsor plug, Adam!

  • @jaikthesnake6285
    @jaikthesnake6285 3 года назад +4

    This has always been interesting to me. I'm from South Dakota, and the capitol city is called Pierre. It is named after a Frenchman, but we pronounce it like "pier." I used to think that everyone around here is wrong because they don't say it like the French name, but I realized that language is pretty malleable

  • @davidxiao8027
    @davidxiao8027 4 года назад +3

    Damn that sponsor transition was so smooth I was caught off guard.

  • @13loodLust
    @13loodLust 4 года назад

    Tee Zat Zickai. I am using that from now on. Thx for the tip

  • @shaunoshaughnessy6728
    @shaunoshaughnessy6728 4 года назад

    I like your cabinet handles because they make a smiley face

  • @katylicious9561
    @katylicious9561 4 года назад +25

    Adam: How to pronounce tricky food names
    Adam 5 seconds later:This is not a guide for how to pronounce challenging food names
    Me:Eating Wait Wain that doesnt even exist

  • @XxElPsyCongrooxX
    @XxElPsyCongrooxX 4 года назад +11

    "WaitWain" I see what you did there....

  • @higherquality
    @higherquality 2 года назад +1

    4:45
    That segway was so smooth I didn't even notice it was a segway and tried to search up "clckr"

  • @seamushowling572
    @seamushowling572 4 года назад

    I once worked around small groups of Italians that flew over here for work. They would constantly talk among each other while working. The enunciation and patter is definitely unique.