It's still fun to call out incorrect place name pronunciations by those who should know better.
Loco4 11p Sat., Priya Mann reporting on a homicide-related event connected to "LEE-ma" Ohio, with mention of the "LEE-ma" police. Lima (Lee-ma) is the capital of Peru. Lima (LiME-a) is the town in Ohio, not far away.
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Thank you for your patience!
- M.W.
Thank you for your patience!
- M.W.
Lima/Lima
Re: Lima/Lima
There’s Clio that they call “Cleo”.
There used to be a Friday Night Football Scoreboard Show on WJR, and they had an announcer from Ohio who used to mispronounce numerous city names in Michigan. Wisconsin town names are difficult, though if you have friends and relatives there for a long time, you get used to certain patterns. Think Mukwonago. I don’t wanna go to Mukwonago.
There used to be a Friday Night Football Scoreboard Show on WJR, and they had an announcer from Ohio who used to mispronounce numerous city names in Michigan. Wisconsin town names are difficult, though if you have friends and relatives there for a long time, you get used to certain patterns. Think Mukwonago. I don’t wanna go to Mukwonago.
"I had a job for a while as an announcer at WWV but I finally quit, because I couldn't stand the hours."
-Author Unknown
-Author Unknown
Re: Lima/Lima
[quote="Ben Zonia" post_id=614001 time=1592724530 user_id=3304]
There’s Clio that they call “Cleo”.
There used to be a Friday Night Football Scoreboard Show on WJR, and they had an announcer from Ohio who used to mispronounce numerous city names in Michigan. Wisconsin town names are difficult, though if you have friends and relatives there for a long time, you get used to certain patterns. Think Mukwonago. I don’t wanna go to Mukwonago.
[/quote]
Do you want to go to Oconomowoc, (it's about 30 miles West of Milwaukee. Me and my brother went their with our grandparents in 1976.)
There’s Clio that they call “Cleo”.
There used to be a Friday Night Football Scoreboard Show on WJR, and they had an announcer from Ohio who used to mispronounce numerous city names in Michigan. Wisconsin town names are difficult, though if you have friends and relatives there for a long time, you get used to certain patterns. Think Mukwonago. I don’t wanna go to Mukwonago.
[/quote]
Do you want to go to Oconomowoc, (it's about 30 miles West of Milwaukee. Me and my brother went their with our grandparents in 1976.)
Re: Lima/Lima
About 10 years ago there was a school district the state was closing up near Bay City. The NAACP and black politicians were calling Synder a racist because it was all black, so it was on the news a lot.
It is spelled Buena Vista but pronounced boon-ah vis-ah. those were some funny reports by people just in from Nevada and Florida stations
It is spelled Buena Vista but pronounced boon-ah vis-ah. those were some funny reports by people just in from Nevada and Florida stations
Re: Lima/Lima
I made that mistake my first night on the air in Saginaw. Phones lit right up.696lover wrote: ↑Sun Jun 21, 2020 7:12 am About 10 years ago there was a school district the state was closing up near Bay City. The NAACP and black politicians were calling Synder a racist because it was all black, so it was on the news a lot.
It is spelled Buena Vista but pronounced boon-ah vis-ah. those were some funny reports by people just in from Nevada and Florida stations
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Re: Lima/Lima
Interesting. I never knew that about Buena Vista until now.
In the 70's, we would go up north on our Vacation, and we always lunched at the Big Boy on M-46, in Buena Vista (sorry...Boona Visa) on the way up.
In those days, I only got to eat at a restaurant about three or four times a year.
In the 70's, we would go up north on our Vacation, and we always lunched at the Big Boy on M-46, in Buena Vista (sorry...Boona Visa) on the way up.
In those days, I only got to eat at a restaurant about three or four times a year.
Re: Lima/Lima
Buena Vista Township was aptly named. Buena Vista is Spanish for "Good View", in case you didn't know. When it was farms, you could see across the entire township at 5 feet above ground level. It's basically flat as a pancake, and only a few feet above Lake Huron level. If you drive there, you'll see that ALL the section line roads have drainage ditches on both sides, at least in the rural parts. Otherwise, there's only one place for the water to go, into the clay soil.
So originally, it was the Spanish pronunciation.
Hasta La Vista!
So originally, it was the Spanish pronunciation.
Hasta La Vista!
"I had a job for a while as an announcer at WWV but I finally quit, because I couldn't stand the hours."
-Author Unknown
-Author Unknown
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Re: Lima/Lima
We have two right here in Washtenaw County that non-locals often get wrong. Saline is pronounced "suh-LENE" (as in the Anglicized pronunciation of "Celine (Dion)"), not "SAY-lene" as in "saline solution." Milan is "MY-lan," not "Mih-LAN" as in the city in Italy.
I imagine "Char-LOTTE" instead of "CHAR-lotte" (as in Charlotte's Web) is another one that gets newcomers.
I used to subscribe to a streaming service that offered CBC North (the television service covering the far northern territories). I noticed the meteorologist (who I assume was located in Toronto or Montreal) occasionally mispronouncing some of the indigenous city names, like "Iqaluit." That would be as much of a challenge for a newcomer as those city names in Wisconsin. (Incidentally, Jane Wiedlin of the Go-Go's is from Oconomowoc.)
I imagine "Char-LOTTE" instead of "CHAR-lotte" (as in Charlotte's Web) is another one that gets newcomers.
I used to subscribe to a streaming service that offered CBC North (the television service covering the far northern territories). I noticed the meteorologist (who I assume was located in Toronto or Montreal) occasionally mispronouncing some of the indigenous city names, like "Iqaluit." That would be as much of a challenge for a newcomer as those city names in Wisconsin. (Incidentally, Jane Wiedlin of the Go-Go's is from Oconomowoc.)