>people that pronounce homage "hommidge" instead of "o-maj"
Do you think starting strenght is actually good? I'm a little worried about my health with all the extra calories I need to consume for it
>first day of class
>professor pronounces it as 'ahl-bear ca-moo'
>>9477075
it's kah-mi
I pronounced paradigm as pair a dig em until i was 24
I used to pronounce "Anglican" and angel-ican.
>>9477048
>People that have autism
>'sipping' anything other than water, tea, black coffee or liquor
not going to make it
>QUICK-SOH-TEE
>>9477075
the american version is 'al-burt came-uss'
no problem
>>9477070
anon, you are only supposed to drink a gallon of milk a day if you are skelly mode, by the words of rippetits
If you pronounce ennui as "on-wee" instead of "en-you-eye", you're a bourgeois jerk.
>>9477284
Same if bourgeois doesn't rhyme with tortoise.
>>9477048
>saying words in their original language when you're not speaking that language, or can't even speak that language at all
You shouldn't do this. The people who speak that language think you're making fun of them. Just say it in the language you're speaking.
I live in Canada where we learn a little bit of French though, so I can't help but say the loan words properly.
>george lewis borgis
>>9477048
There are two different meanings of the word homage. The first is a reference to something, which is pronounced o-maj. The second is the act of acknowledging your feudal lord, which is pronounced "hommidge." So you'd pay hommidge to the king but make an o-maj to a book.