It's pronounced like "black" and "leaf" joined together.
The name is a rendering of my surname "de Blacliffe". It's Norman and is pronounced "Debbie."
... and the way that a Kipper pronounces "Black" is "Block".
It's pronounced like "black" and "leaf" joined together.
The name is a rendering of my surname "de Blacliffe". It's Norman and is pronounced "Debbie."
It's pronounced like "black" and "leaf" joined together.
The name is a rendering of my surname "de Blacliffe". It's Norman and is pronounced "Debbie."
Rita Kohli - Rita Cola.
Leicestershire
... and the way that a Kipper pronounces "Black" is "Block".
you're a microaggression
Stalin did nothing wrong.
Lestershire, or Lestashire depending on your accent
Some posh people down south pronounce it "Lestersheer" and "Wiltsheer" and "Lancasheer" etc.
In the North West of England people say "Lestersher" and "Wiltsher" and "Lancasher."
That's passive/agression, not micro-agression.
Some posh people down south pronounce it "Lestersheer" and "Wiltsheer" and "Lancasheer" etc.
In the North West of England people say "Lestersher" and "Wiltsher" and "Lancasher."
Nope, that happens all the time. The Old Stock only gets their panties in a knot when the crier is non-white.Is that so?
It's not about someone crying because their teacher can't say their name?
Nope, that happens all the time. The Old Stock only gets their panties in a knot when the crier is non-white.
I'm reminded of the time as a young'n travelling with my folks to the Cape and passing through Worchester MA, billboards advertising local radio and TV stations even spelled it Wooster.
That just seems to me to be dumbing down the spelling.
In Herefordshire, there's a town called Leominister - which is pronounced "Lemster."
In Norfolk there's a village - where the world's oldest human footprints outside of Africa have been found - called Happisburgh. It's pronounced "Hazebruh."
And then there's "Mousehole" pronounced Mozzle down in Cornwall.
Nobody ever gets my name right and it's Scottish.
That just seems to me to be dumbing down the spelling.
In Herefordshire, there's a town called Leominister - which is pronounced "Lemster."
In Norfolk there's a village - where the world's oldest human footprints outside of Africa have been found - called Happisburgh. It's pronounced "Hazebruh."
And that's especially embarrassing on the East Coast where almost everyone is of Scottish of Irish descent
Then there's the spillover to things nautical like forecastle, gunwales, boatswain, fowx-ul, gunnels, and boson
And that's especially embarrassing on the East Coast where almost everyone is of Scottish of Irish descent
Then there's the spillover to things nautical like forecastle, gunwales, boatswain, fowx-ul, gunnels, and boson
... kipper ... limey ..
I think it's "Mowzul".
The reason the town got its name is because the tiny space between the two piers that lead into the harbour is small like a mousehole.
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I think you're right.
The City Hawick in Scotland is pronounced hike.
It's pronounced "hoyk"! I know that because when I was a kid the whole family used to stay in a caravan on a farm in Cumbria for a week or two right near the border with Scotland and sometimes we used to go into Hawickhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gotham,_Nottinghamshire