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I feel this is a cultural thing. Germans and Dutch looooove to go out of their way and use the pronunciation as close as usual to the original. Spaniards look at the word and read it like they would if it was a spanish word. You sound insanely preposterous if you don't. I sometimes do and I get legit comments on it.
 
I feel this is a cultural thing. Germans and Dutch looooove to go out of their way and use the pronunciation as close as usual to the original. Spaniards look at the word and read it like they would if it was a spanish word. You sound insanely preposterous if you don't. I sometimes do and I get legit comments on it.
As a Spanish person, does it make you want to die inside when English speakers try to say chorizo authentically?
 
I honestly don't have a position, I can do both. I appreciate some effort when it's about my name, but I've also given up on that long ago so I'm not that bothered.

Also I think the deal with Spanish is, there are many many variations of it. Like I lisp that "z", but most spanish speaking countries don't. So it's not that weird if the person does it
 
How is it pronounced in Italian?

And how in the world do you speak so many languages??? I speak bits and pieces of several but still
By accident really. My grandparents are Irish and Italian and Russian and Ukrainian. I was born in Germany and spent most of my childhood in England. As an adult I lived in Monaco for a few years
 
Well, nearly everything to be honest. But that’s normal. If pronounced cappuccino the same in English as I do when speaking Italian, I’d sound like a complete idiot
I guess this is why so many people find Giada DeLaurentiis' pronunciations of Italian words to be annoying. She's pronouncing them as she would if she was speaking Italian.
 
I honestly don't have a position, I can do both. I appreciate some effort when it's about my name, but I've also given up on that long ago so I'm not that bothered.

Also I think the deal with Spanish is, there are many many variations of it. Like I lisp that "z", but most spanish speaking countries don't. So it's not that weird if the person does it
Your name is HARD
 
It seems as though even when we're pronouncing the vowels and consonants correctly, non-Russian speakers are frequently getting the stresses wrong.

In addition to showing some gorgeous gymnastics from perhaps my favorite era, this old Soviet newsreel is useful because the narrator lists the names of many gymnasts at the end. That's how I learned it's "YUR-chenka" and not "Yur-CHENK-o," or "SHAP-oshnikova" and not "Shap-OSH-nik-ova."

 

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