Brits Try To Pronounce American Towns

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  • Опубликовано: 8 янв 2025

Комментарии • 2,9 тыс.

  • @rjgraddy11
    @rjgraddy11 4 года назад +1718

    I definitely was hoping they’d get some Native American towns/cities. There’s so many I can’t even pretend to pronounce 😂

    • @fread51
      @fread51 4 года назад +72

      Nacogdoches

    • @pengu82
      @pengu82 4 года назад +78

      Michilimackinac, ypsilanti, charlevoix

    • @asunflower7993
      @asunflower7993 4 года назад +70

      I know it's so funny when people first try to pronounce Puyallup it's great🤣

    • @AmyHollinger1
      @AmyHollinger1 4 года назад +48

      Cuyahoga, winnipesaukee!

    • @Magdalenasfears
      @Magdalenasfears 4 года назад +43

      @@pengu82 being a michigander and Anishinaabe I feel like our cities are easy. They're said like they spelt. Except charlevoix. I believe that's French (the x is usually a sign of a French word up here lol)

  • @NathanMN
    @NathanMN 4 года назад +618

    Fun fact: one of the zip codes for Schenectady, New York, is 12345.

    • @TheInkPitOx
      @TheInkPitOx 4 года назад +10

      Pandora wont accept that as a zipcode anymore.

    • @AdamSmith-gs2dv
      @AdamSmith-gs2dv 4 года назад +26

      Yea that's the General Electric building, they snatched that number up when post codes first became a thing so people could mail them easily. Of course now they end up getting kids Santa letters (I am not kidding, my dad works there and every Christmas the mail workers take time out of their day to respond to these letters)

    • @emPtysp4ce
      @emPtysp4ce 4 года назад +8

      Wow, that's the combination on my luggage

    • @HayTatsuko
      @HayTatsuko 4 года назад

      @@emPtysp4ce

    • @nolagirl2458
      @nolagirl2458 4 года назад +2

      @@AdamSmith-gs2dv That's really sweet

  • @ritsuxsohma
    @ritsuxsohma 4 года назад +875

    A lot of the city names in America are derived from Native Americans.

    • @JarisGoesAheadPretty1995
      @JarisGoesAheadPretty1995 4 года назад +12

      ThatsJazzy And the states.

    • @simonpowell2559
      @simonpowell2559 4 года назад +16

      As I understand there simply is just no translation. Chapaquidik comes to mind.

    • @laurenmiller4824
      @laurenmiller4824 4 года назад +28

      Yes. I’m from Oklahoma. Since we were “Indian territory” before becoming a state many of city names come from Native American words. While it’s really fascinating it also is saddening to think on the history and what happened here.
      I went to college in Tahlequah the Cherokee Nation/Capital. You can take courses in Cherokee there. :)

    • @ritsuxsohma
      @ritsuxsohma 4 года назад +10

      Cerulean Lion That’s so cool and interesting that you can still learn Cherokee! I live in Virginia/DC area and there’s definitely names of areas like Roanoke and Rappahannock.

    • @suzannewebb7913
      @suzannewebb7913 4 года назад +4

      A lot of city / towns in USA are from uk

  • @karendinkel9040
    @karendinkel9040 4 года назад +440

    “It’s like someone mashed the keyboard.”
    Welsh: hold my tea

    • @eauhomme
      @eauhomme 3 года назад +11

      How do you pronounce llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch?

    • @karendinkel9040
      @karendinkel9040 3 года назад +14

      Just like it’s spelled:
      *chaos and guttural ch’s*

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 3 года назад +3

      @@eauhomme Just like they do over there: "chumley"

    • @homestuckaddict
      @homestuckaddict 3 года назад

      Lmaoooooo

    • @homestuckaddict
      @homestuckaddict 3 года назад

      Seriously is “o ddifrif” lol

  • @Seapatico
    @Seapatico 4 года назад +139

    Within thirty seconds, one woman says "shneck daddy" and a dude guesses "snake titty". This is brilliant.

    • @dirtymike3329
      @dirtymike3329 3 года назад

      Lmao then she says it sounds dirty… no kidding you made up your own word

  • @DuhitsBujuh
    @DuhitsBujuh 4 года назад +691

    It's funny he first pronounced Pflugerville with the P, because that's a joke sometimes here in Austin. Especially when they have their Pflugerville Pfireworks Pfestival at the Pflugerville Pfield (I wish I was joking)

    • @denisenilsson1366
      @denisenilsson1366 4 года назад +10

      Was Pflugerville named after Mr Pflug?

    • @picklerick4241
      @picklerick4241 4 года назад +15

      This comment is underrated

    • @cathywoodward4457
      @cathywoodward4457 4 года назад +12

      @@denisenilsson1366 Mr. Pfluger, yes.

    • @weirdselki555
      @weirdselki555 4 года назад +5

      69 likes don't ruin it lol

    • @janiemiddlebrooks8993
      @janiemiddlebrooks8993 4 года назад +3

      I have an Uncle that moved to Pflugerville last year. I really feel the need to pick at him about the Pfestival. Lol

  • @pandafloof3887
    @pandafloof3887 4 года назад +310

    “What’s the point of having the G if you aren’t going to use it?” That’s how I feel about most of the English language. It’s infuriating.

    • @arlaur
      @arlaur 4 года назад +10

      It could be worse. There are even more silent g's in Italian.

    • @PUAlum
      @PUAlum 4 года назад +2

      When i tried to hire a private tour for a family gathering based out of Edinburgh, they told me they'd give me a cost estimate IF i could pronounce where we were staying: Kilconquhar.
      i bet many Brits would miss that one too! (The tour operators were hilarious and we had a great day-trip through Scotland).

    • @spinynorman887
      @spinynorman887 4 года назад +9

      You mean like how "comb" rhymes with "gnome" but not with "womb"?

    • @cuongpham6218
      @cuongpham6218 4 года назад +5

      The thing is the English spelling is kinda fossilized while the spoken language evolves with time. So long story short, almost all of the silent letters in English words used to be pronounced, but as the language evolves, they were made silent. For example the "gh" in light was pronounced as /c/ and thus light was pronounced as /lict/ just like Licht in German. The same goes for the letter "k" in all words containing the "kn" combination (again comparison between knee in English and Knie /kni/ in German).

    • @teresaledoux2120
      @teresaledoux2120 4 года назад +3

      Like the extra" fe" in giraffe, lol

  • @malenalanglie2195
    @malenalanglie2195 4 года назад +564

    Disappointed they didn’t pick one of the MANY towns in Washington that is named after Native tribes...

    • @increaseyourstats
      @increaseyourstats 4 года назад +65

      I love it when people first try to pronounce Puyallup.

    • @denisenilsson1366
      @denisenilsson1366 4 года назад +39

      @@increaseyourstats It's used in the game "SPOT THE TOURIST!" So is Sequim.

    • @Internationale7
      @Internationale7 4 года назад +33

      As a British person who lived in Washington State, I am smug over my ability to pronounce the place names there

    • @asunflower7993
      @asunflower7993 4 года назад +4

      @@increaseyourstats Yeah I know it's hilarious🤣

    • @pjabrony8280
      @pjabrony8280 4 года назад +11

      We've got plenty of those on Long Island, too: Ronkonkoma, Nissequogue, Amaganssett.

  • @PBurns-ng3gw
    @PBurns-ng3gw 4 года назад +417

    "Zzyzx" sounds like the name of a heartburn medication.

    • @deniseatkinson8691
      @deniseatkinson8691 4 года назад +44

      Stop taking Zzyxx if you experience swelling, difficulty breathing, paralysis or death.

    • @blainewilliams394
      @blainewilliams394 4 года назад +16

      @@deniseatkinson8691 *people dancing in the background

    • @Nick-lx4fo
      @Nick-lx4fo 4 года назад +11

      Xyzal

    • @realjames8487
      @realjames8487 3 года назад +2

      @@Nick-lx4fo lol that's an allergy med

    • @nathanpanusky2531
      @nathanpanusky2531 3 года назад +7

      Don't take Zzyzx if you have a family history of asthma or other pre-existing heart conditions.

  • @FinnishAmericanOnePieceFan
    @FinnishAmericanOnePieceFan 4 года назад +67

    “I feel like Lafayette is a place you’d want to go to a bed and breakfast”
    *Laughs in Louisiana*

  • @adamgh0
    @adamgh0 4 года назад +465

    From the people who brought you "Worcestershire."

    • @itneverends7
      @itneverends7 4 года назад +12

      Worcester, MA

    • @crowbar9566
      @crowbar9566 3 года назад +19

      And Gloucestershire, Leicestershire, Aberystwyth

    • @tial2915
      @tial2915 3 года назад +1

      😂

    • @ce1834
      @ce1834 3 года назад +9

      New England is full of those types of names :)

    • @itneverends7
      @itneverends7 3 года назад +4

      @@crowbar9566 there's also a Gloucester, MA and a Leicester, MA

  • @Jenniefordummies
    @Jenniefordummies 4 года назад +943

    How is nobody talking about Glenelg being a pallendrome?!

    • @fygfjkkhfgfghkhd6095
      @fygfjkkhfgfghkhd6095 4 года назад +19

      My name is a palendrome. Ava

    • @jimmycrackcorn2516
      @jimmycrackcorn2516 4 года назад +30

      "A man, a plan, a canal: Panama." People are talking about THAT.

    • @grandy2875
      @grandy2875 4 года назад +12

      most people get hung up trying to pronounce it, they don't notice. I knew this one because we have a Glenelg in South Australia...

    • @FionaEm
      @FionaEm 4 года назад +6

      @@grandy2875 My whole Aussie life I've been pronouncing the g at the end of Adelaide's Glenelg. Have I been wrong? 😱

    • @grandy2875
      @grandy2875 4 года назад +5

      @@FionaEm nah, I don't think you've been wrong, pretty much every South Aussie I've ever met has said the "G" at the end...
      for further confirmation, I s'pose we could always ask Kochie, he is, after all, the authority on all things S.A....(said with tongue firmly planted in cheek)... :))

  • @TheReesterBunny
    @TheReesterBunny 4 года назад +201

    It's actually pronounced "Seattle".

  • @jaycee330
    @jaycee330 4 года назад +249

    Brits: "Glenelg" where did the "g" go?
    Me: "Worcester".

    • @michaelburke4975
      @michaelburke4975 4 года назад +4

      Wista

    • @megan_alnico
      @megan_alnico 4 года назад +6

      @@michaelburke4975 I'd say it's more Wuhstah if your a native. Wuster if you're from Connecticut or some other New England town with a rotic accent.

    • @sachemofboston3649
      @sachemofboston3649 4 года назад +1

      @@megan_alnico Most people I know from Worcester pronounce it "wistah"

    • @megan_alnico
      @megan_alnico 4 года назад

      @@sachemofboston3649 With an 'i' sound.. interesting! I haven't talked to my Massachusetts friends in a while. I should check back in..

    • @xbubblehead
      @xbubblehead 4 года назад +3

      They added the last g just to make it a palindrome.

  • @xmortimorxmortimorx
    @xmortimorxmortimorx 4 года назад +65

    when talking about zzyzx california the girl said "you know thats kind of a hot name for a place not gonna lie" well she's right, literally. the town is in the mojave dessert and is one of the hottest places on earth. during the summer time has reached temperatures of 130 degrees (54.4 celsius) one of the hottest air temperatures ever recorded anywhere on the earth.

    • @eleanorlyndon865
      @eleanorlyndon865 3 года назад +1

      As someone who hates the heat, I think I wouldn't go there. Ever....

    • @awkwardturtle77
      @awkwardturtle77 3 года назад

      I've been there, and it is

  • @sambreaux5723
    @sambreaux5723 4 года назад +283

    As someone from Lafayette, LA...we do not say it that way...we say “Lah-fee-yet” or “Laugh-ee-yet”. Pretty sure it’s the same in Indiana. Only “Lah-fah-yet” in French, usually. :)

    • @Ash.MR.
      @Ash.MR. 4 года назад +15

      It is! I'm from the one in Indiana.

    • @SolidSiren
      @SolidSiren 4 года назад +4

      Depends how hard your accent is, really. Im in Kentucky. We have a school here, Lafayette H.S. We call it Lah-fah-yet.

    • @craigwheller
      @craigwheller 4 года назад +3

      I thought those of us who have lived there, say "Lay-flat"

    • @BlaineStewart123
      @BlaineStewart123 4 года назад +1

      THANK YOU!!!

    • @cjmarsh504
      @cjmarsh504 4 года назад

      That's right

  • @anykoop
    @anykoop 4 года назад +197

    British people pronouncing American city names...
    Americans: How the hell do you say that name???

    • @josie3221
      @josie3221 4 года назад +13

      I lot of these were fairly obscure cities.

    • @abbycross90210
      @abbycross90210 4 года назад +3

      I'd say only a couple were obscure.

    • @alainahornberger4591
      @alainahornberger4591 4 года назад +2

      I dunno, I pretty much already knew all of those.

    • @HerbalMoon17
      @HerbalMoon17 3 года назад

      Brit: Zzyzx.
      American Me: Gezondheid? 😂

    • @kimberlyhicks3644
      @kimberlyhicks3644 3 года назад

      My favorite is Snakedaddy, New York. I need to visit that place. LOL 😆😜🤪🤗🤗🤗

  • @DennisQLy-qx2em
    @DennisQLy-qx2em 4 года назад +2186

    To be fair, we Americans don’t even know how to pronounce most of these names.

    • @tombstonerforever9374
      @tombstonerforever9374 4 года назад +46

      I like Americans.

    • @TheSnowdogsShorts
      @TheSnowdogsShorts 4 года назад +33

      Tombstoner Forever, I like Americans so much that I married one. :)

    • @SunRayzzz
      @SunRayzzz 4 года назад +60

      Speak for yourself. I knew most of them

    • @wekqv4237
      @wekqv4237 4 года назад +1

      Alana Higgins 😭 which one they’re a lot?

    • @alistairt7544
      @alistairt7544 4 года назад +34

      What? I knew all except for Glenelg and Zzyzx. Tucson, Des Moines, Louisville, Boise are all pretty well-known domestically

  • @julianacantu3402
    @julianacantu3402 4 года назад +50

    "wheres the g gone?" bold words coming from a place that spells 'lester' as liecester

    • @overlordnat
      @overlordnat 3 года назад +13

      ‘Leicester’ actually!

    • @th3radlad_727
      @th3radlad_727 3 года назад

      We put e at the end of so many words and the e ends up becoming silent so I end up feeling like them

    • @thomasbonse
      @thomasbonse 3 года назад

      @@th3radlad_727 It's very French to do that.

    • @ohhiitsjustme3445
      @ohhiitsjustme3445 3 года назад +1

      Exactly!! Anytime I watch Jamie Vardy play, I just shake my head that Brits say “Lester”! Makes zero sense to me

  • @Moro_Wins
    @Moro_Wins 4 года назад +64

    Only out-of-towners call it "Boizee." We pronounce the 'S' here!

    • @maddywheeler791
      @maddywheeler791 4 года назад +2

      Exactly!

    • @GreatLakesSurfer
      @GreatLakesSurfer 4 года назад +1

      That's what I thought. Out of towner here but know someone from Boise with an 's' sound.

    • @Socasmx
      @Socasmx 4 года назад

      Where was Pocatello? That would be more interesting.

    • @Socasmx
      @Socasmx 4 года назад

      @Joel S that's pleasing

    • @kmmara41
      @kmmara41 4 года назад +5

      JUST explain this to my daughter; and you proved my point! Boy C, right?

  • @MrMickshan
    @MrMickshan 4 года назад +253

    I love hearing the people from whom we got Worcestershire ask, "Why is that letter there if you're not going to say it?"

    • @carolyng5133
      @carolyng5133 4 года назад +4

      😆 it’s all good fun

    • @kdrapertrucker
      @kdrapertrucker 4 года назад +2

      People who created the language with words like phone.

    • @TheInkPitOx
      @TheInkPitOx 4 года назад +4

      Wustuhshuh

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 4 года назад +5

      Woostuhsheer, Woostuhsheeuh (like idea) or Woostuhshuh

    • @johng6080
      @johng6080 4 года назад +4

      Bri’ish

  • @Fizzlesmirk
    @Fizzlesmirk 4 года назад +180

    As a Louisvillian, while “Loo-ih-vill” as they said it in the “correct” pronunciation is technically acceptable, anyone from here will tell you, it’s Loo-vull or Loo-uh-vull!!

    • @kmmara41
      @kmmara41 4 года назад +7

      Until you move to Colorado and they call a little suburb Lew-issville. Who’s in charge here?

    • @abbycross90210
      @abbycross90210 4 года назад +14

      My kin are from KY and I came here looking for this comment.

    • @mandeemallonee
      @mandeemallonee 4 года назад +3

      As a fellow citizen of the Commonwealth, I came looking for this. The "vul" is imperative!

    • @vespista1971
      @vespista1971 4 года назад +2

      From Cincinnati, and I know that the fastest way to tell someone, (Americans included), is not from the general area is to hear them pronounce it Lou-ee-ville... The more “uh” sound you put in that word, (2nd *and* 3rd syllable), the better! I’ve even heard some of my KY relatives with a very strong accent pronounce it in a way that sounds almost like “Lullvull.”

    • @SomeFreakingCactus
      @SomeFreakingCactus 4 года назад +2

      It's like Ne-va-duh and N'-vaah-duh.

  • @laurenmiller4824
    @laurenmiller4824 4 года назад +246

    I’m American and when I saw “Zzyzx” I thought, that can’t be real. Lol. 😅 guess it was real, but when you hear the pronunciation it sounds kind of cool.

    • @dougbowers1256
      @dougbowers1256 4 года назад +31

      Zzyzyx is barely a place. It’s a freeway off ramp in the desert between LA & Las Vegas. Reportedly the population of Zzyzyx is 1.

    • @jimsteele9261
      @jimsteele9261 4 года назад +4

      I kept seeing the magic word from the old "colossal cave" computer game... XYZZY

    • @jeouxamor
      @jeouxamor 4 года назад +3

      Well I’m English and I saw the ‘Americans try to pronounce British town names’ and didn’t get most of it right 😭😂

    • @duanevp
      @duanevp 4 года назад +11

      @@dougbowers1256 Yeah, anyone who's driven the 15 more than once between LA and Vegas knows the Zzyzyx road exit outside Baker, CA. It's not a town, though, and never was. It's just a place name, and a totally made-up one at that:
      From Wikipedia:
      "Curtis Howe Springer made up the name Zzyzx and gave it to the area in 1944, claiming it to be the last word in the English language."

    • @nataliejaramillo3832
      @nataliejaramillo3832 4 года назад +2

      Lol I’m from Vegas so definitely one thing I actually knew 😂

  • @LordKalkin
    @LordKalkin 4 года назад +12

    Got a giggle from this watching it from Pflugerville, Tx. For the person who wondered, yes, it's quite pretty, being right up against Austin. Lots of trees.

  • @thealyssac27
    @thealyssac27 4 года назад +35

    I'm also surprised they didn't give them Poughkeepsie. 😆

  • @May-qb3vx
    @May-qb3vx 4 года назад +202

    Ok that Louisville one wasn’t fair. Even within Kentucky we have two pronunciations. Like I say it like I’ve got a mouth full of marshmallows but others will still say pronounce it “looey-ville”.

    • @sethray8480
      @sethray8480 4 года назад +28

      Very True. I pronounce it the other way as stated in the video. I've always told people to pronounce it as if you're saying the name Louis but drop the ee sound at the name and replace it with an uh sound then end it with vul as in the first syllable of the word vulture. So, "Louhvul."

    • @auntietravels5100
      @auntietravels5100 4 года назад +18

      Loo UH vull

    • @amyhull754
      @amyhull754 4 года назад +2

      I pronounce it Loo-uh-vul as wlel.

    • @johnlabus7359
      @johnlabus7359 4 года назад +5

      same with New Orleans. There a variety of pronunciations.

    • @rdptll
      @rdptll 4 года назад +8

      Hoosiers say "Loouhvull"

  • @DagnyKight
    @DagnyKight 4 года назад +116

    I can't believe they didn't attempt anything like Schuykill or Oconomowoc.

    • @annedavis6090
      @annedavis6090 4 года назад +2

      O con o mowak🙃

    • @barbarabrown7974
      @barbarabrown7974 4 года назад +3

      As I don't live far from Oconomowoc -- I live in Wauwatosa -- I can pronounce it just fine.

    • @thesaraheffect
      @thesaraheffect 4 года назад +4

      Missed opportunity with Native American named cities!

    • @rolandgunslinger37
      @rolandgunslinger37 3 года назад

      Hahahahahahahaha!!! I was thinking the same thing as a Wisconsinite myself.

    • @karen175
      @karen175 3 года назад +2

      Schuykill!!! I’m from Philly.

  • @Ms2cents
    @Ms2cents 4 года назад +90

    You should have included towns with more Native American origin names. They will really be confused! 😂

    • @GreatLakesSurfer
      @GreatLakesSurfer 4 года назад

      Yep, I lived in Kankakee, IL for quite a while. It's from the Miami-Illinois Algonquian language. It's also about 60 miles south of Chicago, fwiw.

  • @SydMountaineer
    @SydMountaineer Год назад +1

    People from the area of Louisville (south IN & OH, KY, TN) pronounce it; *Lou-uh-vull* where the emphasis is on Lou, the ‘uh’ is very short and like a short ‘a’, and a hard stop at the ‘L’ in ‘vul’.

  • @BrentWatkins-creative-services
    @BrentWatkins-creative-services 4 года назад +38

    Sorry Buzzfeed, but any Kentuckian knows Louisville is pronounced "Loo-vill."

    • @kaldogorath
      @kaldogorath 4 года назад +1

      Many Kentuckians are disagreeing with what you said here in the comments

    • @BrentWatkins-creative-services
      @BrentWatkins-creative-services 4 года назад

      @@kaldogorath I read those comments and I think the "u" is open to interpretation. Sometimes you can hear it. Sometimes you can't (especially with the old-timers). But nevermind I lived there for 10 years and grew up in Western Kentucky.

    • @Bombo505
      @Bombo505 4 года назад

      I always pronounced it as Louie ville. Am I wrong?

    • @LordHarv
      @LordHarv 4 года назад +6

      Ville is pronounced vul
      Source: born and raised in Loouhvul

    • @eaglefighter1295
      @eaglefighter1295 3 года назад +1

      @@Bombo505 Yes. Like Zach said we prounounce it Loouuhvul

  • @alistairt7544
    @alistairt7544 4 года назад +76

    I was expecting more Native American place names :/

  • @harrymiles2652
    @harrymiles2652 4 года назад +64

    Tom: America, I'm gonna need you to try a bit harder with your place names, because I got it
    *2 seconds later*
    Zzyzx: Your wish is my command

    • @GreatLakesSurfer
      @GreatLakesSurfer 4 года назад +1

      I see what you did there. Colossal Cave Adventure?!

  • @BIGBLOCK5022006
    @BIGBLOCK5022006 4 года назад +78

    Here in Michigan we have Ypsilanti, Dowagiac, Ludington, L'Anse, Sault Sainte Marie, St. Ignace, and Mackinac Island.

    • @paulriddle7818
      @paulriddle7818 4 года назад +7

      And Ontonagan. i have a lot of cousins there.

    • @annedavis6090
      @annedavis6090 4 года назад +2

      laud yes.. Soo Saint Marie 🤣

    • @tiffanypatton9293
      @tiffanypatton9293 4 года назад +1

      Don’t forget Germfask......

    • @annedavis6090
      @annedavis6090 4 года назад

      @@tiffanypatton9293 how do you say it? I'd guess Germ Flask🤷

    • @tiffanypatton9293
      @tiffanypatton9293 4 года назад

      @@annedavis6090 first part is Germ second part is like flask but without the l. It’s the letters of the people who settled the town

  • @RichardDCook
    @RichardDCook 4 года назад +3

    Some of the strangest US names are in California because they're Native American names first written down by Spanish settlers: Tejon, Hueneme, Tuolumne, Cahuenga. In West Virginia there's Kanawha (a city, a county, and a river) which no outsider pronounces correctly. Then you have US cities named after European cities which Americans mispronounce like Versailles Kentucky (care to guess?) BTW the video is wrong, Boise is "BOY-see" for locals. Only outsiders put a "Z" in it.

  • @CK_Godoth
    @CK_Godoth 3 года назад +12

    Tom's really good in the game😆.Like how he knew diff language where the words are possibly derived from.

  • @opheliacloser6255
    @opheliacloser6255 4 года назад +192

    America, I am *confusion*
    America *EXPLAIN*

    • @joanneg2075
      @joanneg2075 4 года назад +11

      I hate that I understood that reference.😂 RIP VINE

    • @nicholassookdeo9441
      @nicholassookdeo9441 4 года назад +1

      🤣💀 kansas and arkansas (arkensaw). Love that vine

    • @michaelrutledge3750
      @michaelrutledge3750 4 года назад +2

      @@nicholassookdeo9441 In Kansas we pronounce the state of Arkansas as everyone else does, but the river, border to border within Kansas, is pronounced as the Ar-KAN-sas River.

    • @melissa7233
      @melissa7233 4 года назад +4

      @@michaelrutledge3750 Whatever you do if your in Akransas don't ever say Ar-KAN-sas about anything. They get really offended. That can almost start a bar fight.

    • @michaelrutledge3750
      @michaelrutledge3750 4 года назад

      @@melissa7233 LOL. I never go to Arkansas, so it won’t be a problem, but I suspect Kansans irritate every Arkansan who ventures near the Arkansas River in our state. I suppose they could retaliate with mispronouncing our state name, but we’re pretty chill about such things.

  • @Anonymous-eu8wt
    @Anonymous-eu8wt 4 года назад +72

    i’m surprised there wasn’t any long island town names in this vid. it definitely would’ve been entertaining to watch someone try to pronounce Ronkonkoma and Aquebogue lmaooo

    • @Newspeak.
      @Newspeak. 4 года назад +5

      RUclips Ruined Me I was thinking the same thing but with some cities in Florida like thonotosassa or kissimmee.

    • @connormachin151
      @connormachin151 4 года назад +2

      @@Newspeak. I would have a guess but it's not exactly something I could convey through text.

    • @alistairt7544
      @alistairt7544 4 года назад

      My aunt lives in Ronkonkoma! 😅

  • @andressencion7270
    @andressencion7270 4 года назад +70

    I finally know how to say Zzyzx after seeing the sign a million times on my way to Vegas

    • @nataliejaramillo3832
      @nataliejaramillo3832 4 года назад +11

      I’ve always heard it as Ziz-Iks, basically how Tom said it!

    • @GreatLakesSurfer
      @GreatLakesSurfer 4 года назад +1

      I moved to Vegas from Illinois (silent s!) years ago and knew about Zzyzx and past it a million times going to California. I always heard it was pronounced Ziz-iks but now I know. I've been saying it wrong all this time. Learn something new everyday.

    • @Nat_the_Chicken
      @Nat_the_Chicken 4 года назад +1

      Ah yes, "Vaygis"

    • @ajw.robert
      @ajw.robert 3 года назад

      Zy ziks

  • @mikcker
    @mikcker 4 года назад +14

    Sitting here in Utah with Tooele (too-will-uh), Duchesne (doo-shane), and Mantua (man-oo-way)... lmao 🤣

    • @georgiawillis5787
      @georgiawillis5787 3 года назад

      I lived in Duchesne County Utah for 12 years lol

  • @texasred2702
    @texasred2702 4 года назад +9

    Wasn't there some old joke about British pronunciations like "It's spelled G-R-O-S-V-E-N-O-R and pronounced 'Chumley'?"

  • @shaneamoody
    @shaneamoody 4 года назад +155

    Recommendation: Try to pronounce cities in Oklahoma. Examples; Poteau, Chickasaw, Tahlequah, Nuyaka, Weleetka, etc. As a Native American myself, I can recognize that some of these are WILD.

    • @stormnchill
      @stormnchill 4 года назад +5

      Oklahoma town names are real interesting

    • @Magdalenasfears
      @Magdalenasfears 4 года назад +7

      Native American from Michigan, we have a similar issue here lol.

    • @carrotjuse
      @carrotjuse 4 года назад +10

      Oklahoma doesn't have a lock on weird names. In Louisiana there's Natchitoches, Tangipahoa, Ponchatoula, Pontchartrain, and Maringouin, among others.

    • @jimsteele9261
      @jimsteele9261 4 года назад +1

      @@Magdalenasfears Also from Michigan. There was a guy in the early days of statehood who named a lot of places.... a lot of the "Indian" names he just made up.... and came up with the meaning later. :-)

    • @Magdalenasfears
      @Magdalenasfears 4 года назад +5

      @@jimsteele9261 I'm Anishinaabe, I was going off more of our words that were used as names, not just some of the random ones that seem to catch people up, or the French ones (though those amuse me too. My ex was from California, and hearing him try to say cadiux, dequindre, or schooner cracked me up, or explaining that mackinac and mackinaw are said the same, ones just the French spelling)

  • @Kelly-yc6pu
    @Kelly-yc6pu 4 года назад +17

    Originally, I'm from Charlevoix. A lot of our towns (in Michigan) are French and Native America.

  • @onjolimurphy2836
    @onjolimurphy2836 4 года назад +73

    As a Kentuckian born and raised, I am so disappointed in the “correct” pronunciation of Louisville.

    • @May-qb3vx
      @May-qb3vx 4 года назад +3

      Literally same. Makes me cringe whenever other kentuckians say it that way.

    • @alistairt7544
      @alistairt7544 4 года назад +2

      Isn't it Loo-euh-ville or something like that? I heard it a while back lol

    • @May-qb3vx
      @May-qb3vx 4 года назад +7

      Jalil Buckseehosen i say it like lul-vull

    • @jessrocksyearight
      @jessrocksyearight 4 года назад +2

      I live in Louisville i think they said it fine

    • @May-qb3vx
      @May-qb3vx 4 года назад +7

      moonbebey This is why I say throwing Louisville in there was a trick. Even we have different pronunciations within our own state! We can’t expect others to know which one is “correct” when we don’t even know 😂

  • @Nat_the_Chicken
    @Nat_the_Chicken 4 года назад +16

    FYI: When we take town names from other languages, we MANGLE them. Don't go "oh, that's French" because there's no WAY those Americans use the French pronunciation.

  • @raviasmara
    @raviasmara 4 года назад +334

    British creates a town's name :
    That's it, that's York
    America creates a town's name :
    Hmm just gonna add New into it, voila, New York
    🤣🤣

    • @DennisQLy-qx2em
      @DennisQLy-qx2em 4 года назад +84

      Ravi Asmara to be fair, it was the English who named it New York lol

    • @HyperDaveUK
      @HyperDaveUK 4 года назад +23

      It was called New Amsterdam first not New York but who cares about facts :-)

    • @sneakerhead6625
      @sneakerhead6625 4 года назад +13

      it’s cos we colonised them not cos they chose to 😂

    • @kishanbhatia5241
      @kishanbhatia5241 4 года назад +6

      Brits names it New York before the USA was 1 big country it was owned by European nations who gave it a lot of the names

    • @-callmecrazy-5859
      @-callmecrazy-5859 4 года назад +5

      I prefer the original York ten times better

  • @emily8878
    @emily8878 4 года назад +58

    Being Brits, they should know the Beatles song lyric, "Jo Jo left his home in Tucson, Arizona for some California grass"

    • @CAMacKenzie
      @CAMacKenzie 4 года назад +1

      Too long ago. And Get Back was not one of their most famous.

    • @carultch
      @carultch 4 года назад +1

      What does that lyrics mean? Does it mean Jojo wants to sit on the grass in California? Or is that a reference to marijuana?

    • @southpuddle
      @southpuddle 4 года назад +4

      @@carultch Definitely a weed reference!

    • @ericjahoda2997
      @ericjahoda2997 4 года назад +2

      I think it's "bought some California grass".

    • @Jade-fs9kh
      @Jade-fs9kh 4 года назад

      Not all of us like the beatles lmao

  • @mrmessy7334
    @mrmessy7334 4 года назад +221

    There's a Glenelg in Scotland too, near the Isle of Skye.

    • @jackbayer6716
      @jackbayer6716 4 года назад +11

      Probably what its named after?

    • @lara_young
      @lara_young 4 года назад +2

      Is it pronounced the same?

    • @spa-town1937
      @spa-town1937 4 года назад +5

      Lara Young the Scottish one has the g at the end pronounced, but with very little emphasis.

    • @shaun2463
      @shaun2463 4 года назад +8

      They only chucked the G at the end to make it a palindrome

    • @georgiejeffery9260
      @georgiejeffery9260 4 года назад +4

      Also one in Australia, in Adelaide

  • @AudreyC379
    @AudreyC379 Год назад +1

    Watching them trying to say Schenectady was simply hilarious. 😆

  • @carowells1607
    @carowells1607 3 года назад +7

    Schenectady is a Mohawk word that means “beyond the pines”.

  • @craigdohmen2648
    @craigdohmen2648 4 года назад +154

    Where's the 'g' gone, say people who pronounce "Leicester" as "Lester". ;)

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 4 года назад +4

      We pronounce it that way in Eastern Mass. as well but we drop the 'r' like in most parts of England, i.e., "Lesta". NEVER "Lyekesster" or "Lyecesster"

    • @nkha23
      @nkha23 4 года назад +2

      Hey Ed. I'm also in Mass. I made the ungodly mistake of calling Billerica Bill-erica when I first read it. Lol how do you feel when people pronounce the "H" in town names that end in "-ham"? Lol makes me cringe a little. Lol

    • @Roonasaur
      @Roonasaur 4 года назад +6

      "Worcestershire"

    • @megablah7384
      @megablah7384 4 года назад +1

      @@Roonasaur this killed me when my ex took me there to meet their family. The Midwestern in me was just like “Wat”

    • @Crandaddy81
      @Crandaddy81 4 года назад +3

      And Gloucester = "Gloster"

  • @Th3Hovster
    @Th3Hovster 4 года назад +151

    Really thought Poughkeepsie, NY was going to be on here.

    • @andrewhawkins6754
      @andrewhawkins6754 4 года назад +6

      or Wantagh

    • @jackiegilpin
      @jackiegilpin 4 года назад +6

      Or Mamaroneck

    • @blackbarnz
      @blackbarnz 4 года назад +13

      Coxsackie really missed it's moment to shine. It's damn near tragic. Nanuet, Saugerties, Wawayada, Mahopac, Buchanan, Katonah, Nyack, Ramapo, Chappaqua, Ossining there's so many in the Hudson Valley.

    • @andrewhawkins6754
      @andrewhawkins6754 4 года назад +6

      @@blackbarnz Where's Waywayonda? Way Way Yonda!

    • @blackbarnz
      @blackbarnz 4 года назад

      @@andrewhawkins6754 lol. Way way yonda near Middletown.

  • @ajm9289
    @ajm9289 4 года назад +54

    “La is such and American pronunciation.”
    The French: b-but

    • @marinazagrai1623
      @marinazagrai1623 4 года назад +3

      AJ M...exactly, they just to have to whine about the only purely French name of a Count whose pronunciation is exactly French!

    • @euphrasiepolly5575
      @euphrasiepolly5575 4 года назад +1

      Actually no, in french the stress would be in -ette

    • @Nat_the_Chicken
      @Nat_the_Chicken 4 года назад +2

      @@marinazagrai1623 According to another comment thread, nobody living in any place called Lafayette in the US actually says it like that. It's always "Lah-fee-yet" or "Lah-fay-yet"

    • @overlordnat
      @overlordnat 3 года назад

      It brings to mind the American pronunciations of ‘pasta’ and ‘taco’, definitely a Yankee vibe to it!

    • @abbycross90210
      @abbycross90210 3 года назад

      nat funny, since neither pasta nor taco are even English words.

  • @melissa7233
    @melissa7233 4 года назад +1

    I got Camarillo wrong too, but to be fair I pronounced it like a Texan would. I had no idea on Glenelg or Zzyzx.
    If they really wanted to throw them for a loop, ask them the proper Texas pronunciation of Humble, TX, or my 2 "favorite" roads in Houston, Fuqua and Kuykendahl. I used to laugh when a non-local would have to give a traffic report.

  • @valerieelliott8359
    @valerieelliott8359 4 года назад +4

    Other fun Indiana towns: Versailles = ver-sales; Vevay = veevee; Loogootee = low-go-tee; Monticello = mon-tuh-sell-o. I used to travel with my dad on summer break. We’ve done a number on every language out there.

    • @ashleymills4233
      @ashleymills4233 2 года назад

      Also: Terre Haute=tare-uh-hote and LaFontaine=luh-fountain lol

  • @Indigoqueer
    @Indigoqueer 4 года назад +21

    There are several Lafayettes in the U.S a d the way they are pronounced is different sometimes due to regional accents. For instance, Lafayette, Indiana is more often pronounced "Laffy-ette" or "Lahffy-ette"

    • @gj8683
      @gj8683 4 года назад +1

      Yes, and as a Hoosier, you know better than to pronounce it a French way, ironic though that may seem to some.

  • @meredithlyon3142
    @meredithlyon3142 4 года назад +32

    Seeing the road sign for Zzyzx makes me happy every time. On Highway 15 on the way to Las Vegas.

    • @arnoldrivas4590
      @arnoldrivas4590 4 года назад

      That’s funny because I’ve traveled on the 15 many times, but I don’t remember Zzyzx at all. Maybe it is a mythical place. 😅

    • @justmare111
      @justmare111 4 года назад

      @@arnoldrivas4590 I've made at least 200 trips to Vegas since 2004 and I am always glad to see Zzyzx Road. It tells me I'm close to Baker which means I'm just a little over an hour away from my favorite gambling town!

    • @lisakp71
      @lisakp71 4 года назад

      In the middle of literal nowhere! Buy halfway to somewhere, so I agree - always happy to see that sign 🙌

  • @j.d.4697
    @j.d.4697 4 года назад +24

    Zzyzx is the place where Polish settlers met the Incas and went "hey we love those letters too!"
    Actually the true the history behind this name could be straight out of The Simpsons.

    • @TheInkPitOx
      @TheInkPitOx 4 года назад +6

      Curtis Howe Springer made up the name Zzyzx and gave it to the area in 1944, claiming it to be the last word in the English language

    • @MrSpock..
      @MrSpock.. 4 года назад +1

      @@TheInkPitOx actually there's a podcast about it, he said it so it would be the last thing under "health" in the phonebook... so he could be the last word in health. Yeah it was a brag

    • @TheInkPitOx
      @TheInkPitOx 4 года назад

      @@MrSpock.. I've never bothered with podcasts. I can't even believe they're still a thing.

    • @MrSpock..
      @MrSpock.. 4 года назад +1

      @@TheInkPitOx alright, to each their own, but just thought I'd let you know where you can find out more. You could also probably find the transcript to read, if that's your thing.

    • @TheInkPitOx
      @TheInkPitOx 4 года назад

      @@MrSpock.. Thanks

  • @Stiglr
    @Stiglr 4 года назад +8

    "Glenelg" was just revenge on you lot for droppin' all them T's, innitt? :D

  • @24n8
    @24n8 4 года назад +1

    One note: Boise is actually pronounced boy-see, not boy-zee. Ask any native and they'll emphatically tell you the same.
    A couple other good ones:
    Chili, New York (CHAI-lie)
    Worcester, Massachusetts (WUH-ster)
    Port Hueneme, California (Port Wy-NEE-mee)
    Tshletshy, Washington (ta-LEE-chee)
    Skamokawa, Washington (ska-MOCK-a-way)
    Steilacoom, Washington (STILL-a-cum)
    Boerne, Texas (Bernie)
    La Jolla, California (Luh HOY-uh)
    Kissimee, Florida (Kuh-SIM-mee)
    Versailles, Kentucky (ver-SAILS)
    Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan (Soo Saint Marie)
    Puyallup, Washington (Pew-AL-up)

  • @mentonerodominicano
    @mentonerodominicano 4 года назад +20

    "I believe it's actually pronounced Seattle" 🤣😂

  • @johndelosreyes2650
    @johndelosreyes2650 4 года назад +72

    Sometimes city names are "silly" or "hard to pronounce" because they're derived from native american language that most people are not aware about anymore.

  • @stevemattfis
    @stevemattfis 4 года назад +16

    They went easy on you guys.
    For example; Puyallup, Murfreesboro, Mamaroneck, Wantagh, Hauppauge, Copiague, Massapequa, Spuyten Duyvil, Leominster and Scituate

    • @TheInkPitOx
      @TheInkPitOx 4 года назад +2

      Pyuyallup (someone else here told me)
      Murfreezbro (thanks to Strong Bad)
      Mammaronnek
      Wantaw
      Hoppog?
      Coppiog
      Massapeekwa
      Spoytin Doyvil
      L'minster
      ****uate?

    • @mapko1981
      @mapko1981 4 года назад +2

      Don't forget Sequim!

    • @intrepidfox37
      @intrepidfox37 4 года назад +2

      I had to LOL that most of that list is in New York. The Michigan cities like Ypsilanti, Hamtramck and Sault Ste. Marie will definitely stump them.

    • @TheInkPitOx
      @TheInkPitOx 4 года назад

      @@intrepidfox37
      Upsilanty
      Hamtrumck
      Soo San Maly

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 4 года назад +3

      The last two are pronounced "'Lem-min-ster" or "'Lem-min-stuh" and "'Sit-chew-it"

  • @robintst
    @robintst 4 года назад +1

    Some Kentucky folks with heavier accents pronounce the "ville" part in Louisville as "vull" with the inflection more in the back of the throat. So the pronunciation turns into "Loo-uh-vull." Where I live (about 50 miles from Pittsburgh, PA) we have an elementary school named Lafayette which our regional accent turns into "Lawfee-ette."

  • @JeantheSecond
    @JeantheSecond 4 года назад +4

    The real fun ones are when we use foreign words, but with a whole new pronunciation.

  • @Mskyeeta98
    @Mskyeeta98 4 года назад +60

    Y'all need to do Washington's native tribe cities

    • @giantsquid2
      @giantsquid2 4 года назад +4

      Like "Puyallup" WA

    • @Mskyeeta98
      @Mskyeeta98 4 года назад +1

      @@giantsquid2 that ones easy 🤣
      I'm talking S’Klallam or Suak-Suiattle

    • @Danonymous5000
      @Danonymous5000 3 года назад +3

      Sequim got me after 20 years in Washington. I'd heard it before, but never seen it in writting til I read a brochure out loud once. Still living that down.

    • @chainsawmike01
      @chainsawmike01 3 года назад

      Washougal, Wa born and raised!

    • @georgiawillis5787
      @georgiawillis5787 3 года назад +1

      Snoqualmie would be a good one

  • @abbyroach205
    @abbyroach205 4 года назад +15

    The fella in the grey hoodie is just adorable! I want to have a cuppa tea with him!

    • @misbahailia3345
      @misbahailia3345 3 года назад

      Make sure the "cuppa" is decafe, the guy is hyper already lolz

    • @bee1501
      @bee1501 3 года назад

      @@misbahailia3345 decaf*

  • @ThatBlackPiano
    @ThatBlackPiano 4 года назад +20

    “I’ve got Schenectady on my foot.”
    🤣😂🤣😂

    • @misbahailia3345
      @misbahailia3345 3 года назад

      His humour is dry, and unusual. I'm here for it. 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @deborahdanielson8901
    @deborahdanielson8901 3 года назад +4

    Try some Louisiana places: Tchefunte, Tchoupitoulas, Marigny, St. Amant, Caliope(nope, not that way-the New Orleans way), Freret Street, Atchafalaya, Carrollton, Theriot, Opelousas, Kaliste Saloom Road, and my favorite Natchitoches, Louisiana versus Nacogodoches, Texas.

    • @Stiglr
      @Stiglr 3 года назад +1

      Indeed, I was shocked when I first heard the "correct" pronunciation of "Nack-a-dish", Louisiana. How do they pronounce that town in Texas?? Does it sound like it could be a lyric in that old Mary Poppins song (Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious)?

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 3 года назад

      @@Stiglr I suspect "Nag-a-doash"

  • @TXKafir
    @TXKafir 4 года назад +1

    You've got to watch the double-Ls in the US southwest. In Spanish, two Ls are pronounced like a Y. So, llevar (to take) is pronounced "yea-var." Sometimes, Spanish words with those names are anglicized and sometimes they're not. California has La Jolla (lah hoya) while Texas has Amarillo (Am-are-ill-o).

  • @699jude
    @699jude 4 года назад +19

    You completely missed my favourite which I found while looking at a map Slicklizzard, AL. Probably not hard to pronounce but wonderfully quirky!

    • @juleefleming6606
      @juleefleming6606 4 года назад +1

      Here in Tennessee we have Frog Jump and Buck Snort

    • @HayTatsuko
      @HayTatsuko 4 года назад +1

      We also have an (unofficial) town named Slapout, as in "perpetually slap out of anything you might want to buy in its general store". The actual town is Holtville, Alabama, about 25 miles northwest of Montgomery.
      ( www.alabamapioneers.com/slapout-holtville-american-idol/ )

    • @0816M3RC
      @0816M3RC 4 года назад

      Here in Texas we have Waxahachie.

  • @chriskaelin8280
    @chriskaelin8280 4 года назад +23

    They needed to come to Florida and try Kissimmee, Chokoloskee and Micanopy

    • @TheInkPitOx
      @TheInkPitOx 4 года назад

      Kiss-im-me
      Chock-o-los-key
      mick-can-oh-pee

    • @chriskaelin8280
      @chriskaelin8280 4 года назад

      @@TheInkPitOx Mick-ah-no-pee

    • @briannaking7345
      @briannaking7345 4 года назад

      Micanopy is actually my little brothers name. So yeah😂

  • @n0tk0sher
    @n0tk0sher 4 года назад +12

    Props to remembering Bugs, dude! He shoulda taken a left turn there.

  • @jamesalexander5623
    @jamesalexander5623 3 года назад +1

    Many times Locals Mispronounce their City's Name ..... Most People from Bethlehem Pennsylvania say "Bethlum" and Folks from Wilkes-Barre Pa. say "Wooks-Berry"!

  • @sylentlight6771
    @sylentlight6771 3 года назад +1

    Oh please do one of specifically how Tennesseans pronounce our town names. It even throws off other Americans, even fellow southerners. From our shortening of names like Shelbyville sounding like Shebvul and Murfreesboro like Murfsburuh, our unique spin on common names where we pronounce a hard E in Santa Fe (instead of sounding like Santa Fay) or putting the emphasis differently in Lafayette where it's LaFAYette, to some of our more fun spelled names like Chattanooga, Hohenwald, Ocoee, Ooltewah, Culleoka, and Tullahoma. Love y'all!

  • @brad4841
    @brad4841 4 года назад +9

    Haha 9:13 "thats just the end of the alphabet ". "Seattle"

  • @shaun2463
    @shaun2463 4 года назад +18

    Louisville is pronounced 'Lou-ee-ville' in a lot of the country. That's like not giving them a point for saying 'New Or-leens' just because people in New Orleans pronounce it 'New Or-lans'. It's still an accepted pronunciation.

    • @Devila103
      @Devila103 4 года назад +3

      Shaun, I’m from Louisiana and most of us say “N’Orlans”. The video got “Lafayette” wrong, too. We say “Laffy-ette”.

    • @user-nc3bj8rf9p
      @user-nc3bj8rf9p 4 года назад +2

      I'm from near Louisiana so I'm not technically a local but it's definitely new or-lins/or-lans

    • @ErinKHayes-un5vl
      @ErinKHayes-un5vl 4 года назад +2

      I've only ever heard it pronounced Lou-ee-ville, I've never heard it said like the pronunciation thing they used

    • @Newspeak.
      @Newspeak. 4 года назад +2

      The way it’s pronounced in the video is closer to how locals would pronounce it.

    • @May-qb3vx
      @May-qb3vx 4 года назад +1

      Jeff Walenta Depends on which locals you mean. Even us kentuckians don’t even have a standardized way of saying it. We do have our personal preferences though.

  • @andreakern7091
    @andreakern7091 4 года назад +54

    Hello from Camarillo, California!!!!

    • @CAMacKenzie
      @CAMacKenzie 4 года назад

      Camarillo? Wha', you CRAZY?

    • @steveogrady6064
      @steveogrady6064 4 года назад +2

      I'm a Brit and I guessed the name of your city correctly! Yay. It sounds nice!

    • @CAMacKenzie
      @CAMacKenzie 4 года назад +1

      @ No, but it's as close as a non-Spanish speaker is likely to get. They don't flap the r, and it comes more like CamerEEo.

    • @TheInkPitOx
      @TheInkPitOx 4 года назад +1

      I wasn't expecting the name to be pronounced the Spanish way. I'll have to remember if we're ever in your boondocks.

    • @TheQueenofScream4
      @TheQueenofScream4 4 года назад +1

      My best friend lives in Camarillo! I’m from Ventura so I goto Camarillo a lot

  • @lxdgr8
    @lxdgr8 3 года назад

    2:54 Pflugerville is bordered by Hutto but some locals call the in-between are Pflutto. Me, I live in Round Rock, Texas.

  • @davidthaler7018
    @davidthaler7018 4 года назад +1

    Worcester/Wooster
    Leicester/Lester
    Gloucester/Gloster, but
    Cirencester/Siren-sester?
    Leominster /Lemster?
    Ely /Eely?
    Slough/Slow (“ow”as in being injured)?
    Fowey/Foy?
    Islay/Eye-la?
    Ruislip/Rise-lip?
    And let’s not even start with Welsh names....particularly that monstrosity that starts with “Llanfair”, and ends 100 or so letters later.

  • @averymaryheart6679
    @averymaryheart6679 4 года назад +28

    I was waiting for them to say La Jolla California… That would’ve been funny

    • @TheInkPitOx
      @TheInkPitOx 4 года назад +2

      Incorrectly believed to mean "the jewel" in Spanish. It comes from a Native American term for "land of many holes".

    • @vespista1971
      @vespista1971 4 года назад +2

      I’m in my 40’s and just learned how to pronounce that one a few years ago... I had *heard* the town mentioned on radio/TV through the years, but never realized that the word I had heard equaled that spelled-out word if I, like, read it in a newspaper or whatever. Like, I guess I thought they were 2 entirely different places 😂

  • @grimftl
    @grimftl 4 года назад +50

    Should have included Natchitoches, Louisiana.

    • @t-shades7148
      @t-shades7148 4 года назад +3

      I just said that and then scrolled and saw your comment 😂

    • @lindariley7037
      @lindariley7037 4 года назад +10

      And Nacogdoches, TX!

    • @pikespice
      @pikespice 4 года назад +1

      A friend of mine used to call the town "Nasty Toe Cheese", and that's just stuck with me even though I know how to pronounce it. lol

    • @annedavis6090
      @annedavis6090 4 года назад +4

      Isn't that pronounced Nagaditch Louisiana? and the Texas one is Nagadochis?😁

    • @pikespice
      @pikespice 4 года назад +2

      @@annedavis6090 close... it's Nakatish :) Never been to the Texas town.

  • @OsagieGuobadia
    @OsagieGuobadia 4 года назад +36

    Britains : Learning to pronounce American's Towns
    Americans : Learning to pronounce British words
    Together : Both of these continents will learn more about America's culture.

    • @bellajaid
      @bellajaid 4 года назад +2

      Americans, learning how to pronounce American Towns, lol

    • @RaymondHng
      @RaymondHng 4 года назад

      Osagie E. Guobadia Either that or your dentures fall out

    • @robintst
      @robintst 4 года назад

      That's a good joke... and also tragically true.

  • @joanmoore3488
    @joanmoore3488 4 года назад +1

    In Virginia Norfolk is pronounced Nawfuk, Suffolk is pronounced Suffuk. And Farmville and Charlottesville the ville is pronounced vull, as in Farmvull, and Charlottesvull. It's a Southern thing ya'll.

    • @overlordnat
      @overlordnat 3 года назад

      So ‘Norfolk’ and ‘Suffolk’ are pronounced like the English counties then? I’m sure I’ve heard ‘Nawfawk’ from Americans before.

  • @ari_valentine
    @ari_valentine 4 года назад +7

    I’m American, and even I pronounce some of these wrong. I’ve never even heard of Glenelg or Zzyzx.

  • @TheJTMcDaniel
    @TheJTMcDaniel 4 года назад +10

    To be fair, see what the average American does with Worcestershire, the River Ouse, Leicester, or Cymru.

    • @serpentmaster1323
      @serpentmaster1323 4 года назад

      Unfortunately worcrcershire is a sauce, so I know that one well. Also theres a place in Massachusetts called Worcester. Although I cant be bothered to spell so what do I know

    • @TheJTMcDaniel
      @TheJTMcDaniel 4 года назад

      @@serpentmaster1323 There's a reason they spelled the one in Ohio "Wooster."

    • @MrRyanKaminski
      @MrRyanKaminski 4 года назад

      We have a Leicester, pronounced sort of like "Lester". Small town in Massachusetts.

    • @TheJTMcDaniel
      @TheJTMcDaniel 4 года назад

      @@MrRyanKaminski Mass seems to be unique in retaining the original spelling and pronunciation of many town names.

    • @mikeg8276
      @mikeg8276 4 года назад

      In California we pronounce Worcestershire "WAR-shter-sherr." I've never heard anyone say "Wooster sauce." If someone did ask for "Wooster sauce" they'd probably get "rooster sauce," aka "cock sauce," aka sriracha.

  • @krissyhansen902
    @krissyhansen902 4 года назад +8

    Lol I live in Wisconsin in the USA. Try and pronounce our towns lol Waukesha.... Manitowoc, Chetek, Oconomowoc, Weyauwega, Chequamegon Nicolet National Forest, Menomonie, Kaukauna. Just to name a few lol I love when my friends from out of state and out of the US come to visit and have no idea what I say lol

    • @MeanLaQueefa
      @MeanLaQueefa 4 года назад +1

      When relatives are driving up nort and I tell them the names. They blank out

    • @barbarabrown7974
      @barbarabrown7974 4 года назад +1

      I live in Wisconsin too. I live in Wauwatosa. It's funny listening to outsiders mangling our city names. When I worked in Elm Grove, a lady was trying to find a Brookfield business on 126th Street. "I keep on ending up in this Wok-kah-toe-sah," she said, somehow combining Waukesha and Wauwatosa.

    • @lulubelle65
      @lulubelle65 4 года назад

      To be fair, I worked with someone from Wisconsin who said she was from “Fawk Rick”. Or at least that’s what I heard. “Fall Creek” is what she was really saying.

    • @krissyhansen902
      @krissyhansen902 4 года назад

      @@lulubelle65 holy Lord lol that doesn't even sound American lol Fall Creek folks don't have much of an accent. She must have secretly been from waaaaay up North lol

    • @user-wd1xr3zy6w
      @user-wd1xr3zy6w 3 года назад

      Wor-keesha Maneeto-wok Che-tech Okko-nomo-wok Wayor-weega Chek-wamme-john Nicolay, Menomonee, Kau-kau-na is my best shot

  • @ramonashearer7241
    @ramonashearer7241 4 года назад +65

    Those are easy. Try Tecumseh or Lotawata, there are a lot of native American names.

    • @rachael4512
      @rachael4512 4 года назад +5

      I agree. I'm British and even the ones I hadn't heard of were easy to guess.

    • @TheSnowdogsShorts
      @TheSnowdogsShorts 4 года назад

      I knew all but two of them, and I even pronounced them correctly.

    • @mariposaenperu5490
      @mariposaenperu5490 4 года назад +7

      Totally agreed!
      Dowagiac, Michilimackinac, Ocqueoc, Ontanogan, Cheboygan, Ypsilanti, Charlotte... Michigan alone has plenty of (mostly Native American) harder place names than those in the video!

    • @amelieicantfly
      @amelieicantfly 4 года назад

      Mariposa en Peru Charlotte is a native name??

    • @mariposaenperu5490
      @mariposaenperu5490 4 года назад +1

      Hi@@amelieicantfly ! No, and Charlotte and Ypsilanti are exactly the reason I put "mostly Native American" in parentheses. 👍🏻 "Charlotte" is of English origin, but the pronunciation of the Michigan town Charlotte differs from the standard pronunciation of the name as used elsewhere. ;-) Ypsilanti is of Greek origin.

  • @theasandys
    @theasandys 3 года назад +1

    I live near Pflugerville (not in Pflugerville) and I never knew it was difficult to pronounce

  • @Myself-anonymously
    @Myself-anonymously 4 года назад +1

    I'm honestly not surprised that Brits are better at pronouncing American towns than Americans are at pronouncing towns of the UK.

  • @lk_c7214
    @lk_c7214 4 года назад +12

    This is funny. I’d like to suggest Brits vs Americans from Massachusetts/New England pronounce town names they have in common. As a native Bostonian, we have so many names that came from England but are pronounced as only a New Englander can! Example: Peabody is pronounced like “pea-buddy” and said quickly. I’d love to see their reactions to those kinds of things. 😊

    • @ourgorlsfavoriteorangechic2711
      @ourgorlsfavoriteorangechic2711 4 года назад

      Woburn, too.

    • @nkha23
      @nkha23 4 года назад

      I'm from Western Mass and screwed up Billerica years ago. I called it Bill-erica and was quickly corrected by a buddy from Tewksbury that said it was Bill-ricka. Lol I giggle listening to people murder the name Chicopee. Lol then there's that Barre. Lol

  • @rowynnecrowley1689
    @rowynnecrowley1689 4 года назад +25

    As a native southern californian, it hurts my heart every time I hear someone mispronounce the double L's.

    • @arnoldrivas4590
      @arnoldrivas4590 4 года назад +1

      And as a guy born and raised in LA, I agree.

    • @karlwebb2588
      @karlwebb2588 4 года назад +5

      I once hear an English celebrity asked to read a traffic report on a San Diego radio station. When he mispronounced La Jolla as "La Jol-la" instead of "La Hoy-ah", there was a rash of calls to the radio station. I could almost feel the cringe in the radio station's sound engineer's spine when he/she heard that mispronunciation.

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 4 года назад

      @@karlwebb2588 lol I used to pronounce it "La Joll-la"

    • @nkha23
      @nkha23 4 года назад

      I'm from Mass and I cringe when I hear people pronounce the "H" in towns that end in "-ham." Lol in their defense, though, I mispronounced a town name here in Mass and was schooled immediately. I'm from the western half and there's a town in the eastern half called Billerica. When I first saw it I read it as "Bill-erica." I was immediately taught is "Bill-ricka." Lol

    • @mikey_b_
      @mikey_b_ 4 года назад +3

      as a resident of camarillo it hurts when people from oxnard pronounce camarillo wrong

  • @imarcusjjuanm5333
    @imarcusjjuanm5333 4 года назад +10

    I love how I also knew how to pronounce Tucson from hearing it in Ugly Betty 😂😂

  • @narglefargle
    @narglefargle 4 года назад +1

    Also, within 10 miles of me, there are the towns of Steilacoom (STILL-a-kum) and Puyallup (pew-AL-up). We've got a lot of places that aren't pronounced the way they're written.

  • @janinafisher101
    @janinafisher101 4 года назад +1

    Zzyzx actually exists. I drove from L.A to Las Vegas and saw the road sign - it's out in the desert. Always wondered how it was pronounced until I listened to an audiobook that took place partly in Zzyzx.

  • @emmiecurlyq17
    @emmiecurlyq17 4 года назад +9

    As a native Idahoan, I speak for all Idahoans when I say it’s not BOY-Z, it’s BOY-C.

  • @jakehoganOW
    @jakehoganOW 4 года назад +6

    I’m from Maryland and everyone that I know here pronounces the last g in Glenelg. Not many people pronounce it like the “correct” way that is shown. I feel like the correct way should be whatever the locals say, as in “loo-uh-vull”, instead of “loo-ee-vill”, for Louisville, Kentucky.

    • @ALHAJ79
      @ALHAJ79 4 года назад +1

      I've only lived in Maryland for...um...17 years, but this is the first time I've ever heard of dropping the g on the end. 🤷🏾‍♂️

    • @skinsfanh88
      @skinsfanh88 3 года назад

      I’m more mad at how the Bot pronounced “Maryland”. Everybody from Maryland is going to pronounce it like “Murrlen”

    • @jakehoganOW
      @jakehoganOW 3 года назад

      @@skinsfanh88 At least in Baltimore and Howard County, I've never heard anyone say it like that, maybe what you're talking about is a regional thing. The bot said it like how everyone I know says it.

    • @skinsfanh88
      @skinsfanh88 3 года назад

      Jake Hogan I’m from PG County born and raised. most black people I know from Baltimore say it the same way I do, I don’t know anybody in Maryland that says it like that bot unless they came here from somewhere else.

    • @skinsfanh88
      @skinsfanh88 3 года назад

      Jake ruclips.net/video/z91m_PYnchA/видео.html Here’s an example of what I mean

  • @alfiedickin8281
    @alfiedickin8281 4 года назад +18

    Tucson Arizona has me singing Get Back by The Beatles "JoJo left his home in Tucson Arizona, for some California grass"

  • @tablehouse1911
    @tablehouse1911 4 года назад +1

    Go to South Carolina and we got places like Round-O, Yemassee, Kingstree (some natives pronounce it Kings-skree) and Moncks Corner. We got people from here (usually Yankee descendants) who can’t even pronounce Moncks Corner.

  • @davemattia
    @davemattia 3 года назад

    The fun part of this, an an American with a lot of Brit friends, is that sometimes they have no clue how far apart some of these cities are....and it's charming. Any city in Maryland is at least 2,000 miles away from Tucson. I met a girl who had just arrived from Leeds, and she thought she could work in New York and drive to Los Angeles on weekends. When I lived in France, I was amazed that I could drive from my home near Nice to Florence in about 5 1/2 hours -- which is less than I drive to go skiing in Northern NY State - or Vermont.

  • @pabloruiz6074
    @pabloruiz6074 4 года назад +16

    7:01 “where does the (g) go?”
    BRITISH WORCESTERSHIRE: “wosteshe” WHERE DOES THE “SHIRE” GO?

    • @somniumisdreaming
      @somniumisdreaming 4 года назад +2

      It’s there.

    • @nadinevanderjagt9737
      @nadinevanderjagt9737 4 года назад +2

      it's pronounced worce-ster-shire rather than wor-ces-ter-shire, just like how leicester is pronounced leice-ster ('lester'), it's not that difficult if you know this

    • @thealyssac27
      @thealyssac27 4 года назад

      @@nadinevanderjagt9737 no it isn't. There's not that many syllables in Worcestershire. It's pronounced "wersht-er-sher". And it's stupid. Lol

    • @sachemofboston3649
      @sachemofboston3649 4 года назад

      wistasure

    • @henryocean1908
      @henryocean1908 3 года назад +1

      @@sachemofboston3649 Woostashr.