- May 18, 2010
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- #61
hahahaha! My above post has a link for a talking dictionary of English pronunciation.....sounds the same to me!
Yeah but then click on aerial lol... FAIL
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hahahaha! My above post has a link for a talking dictionary of English pronunciation.....sounds the same to me!
Still sounds the same to me! FAIL!Yeah but then click on aerial lol... FAIL
i hear "air-ia"Still sounds the same to me! FAIL!
aeria sounded like Eeeeria though...
I just sat here for 5 minutes saying "AIR O" amd "arrow" and cannot for the life of me hear a difference. Maybe someone should get in contact with AEROsmith and ask them how they would like for their band name to me said.
I hear eeeria.i hear "air-ia"
No matter how much it is explained "arrow" and "aero" sound the exact same to me.
I know that they are called "AIR Osmith", I have seen them in concert, but that sounds just like "ARROWsmith" to myself and many other people.
No one is going to agree on how to say it because everyone has different accents no matter where you live.
Now as far as Arabesque (the real topic) I doesn't really bother me if someone spells it wrong because I am not a spelling bee winner myself. So if it makes sense to them and they know what they are talking about then it doesn't mean squat to me.
No they're not. Not where I'm from in MA. Aero is more like Air-O and arrow is a softer sound.
I agree to an extent, but I think the issue for me is that AEROBESQUE and ARABESQUE are completely different root words. Like, if you say scorpian instead of scorpion... that's just misspelled. But if you write hoarsefly instead of horsefly, then we have a problem lol
then ii apologize, where i cheer in MA ive never heard a difference, nor in Maine, or Connecticut