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Has it alwasy been pronounced Ni-jheer
October 06, 2017, 06:34 PM
P-220Has it alwasy been pronounced Ni-jheer
The past two days, I have heard several news people to Niger, as Ni-jheer.
Was it always pronounced like a French word? Like Steve Colbert chose late in life to make his name sound French, pronouncing it Kol-baer.
Inquiring minds want to know. I just always pronounced it Ni-geer.
Niech Zyje P-220
Steve
October 06, 2017, 06:36 PM
arfmelSounds kind of fancy if they call it ni-jheer.
October 06, 2017, 06:41 PM
MikeinNCNo it has not...much like the Camp Lejune bullshit here in NC a year back...som crackhead said "Well it was always pronounced LER-jurnn...no, no the fuck it wasn't. His name was La-June....
Words have meaning.
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RAMIUSquote:
Originally posted by MikeinNC:
No it has not...much like the Camp Lejune bullshit here in NC a year back...som crackhead said "Well it was always pronounced LER-jurnn...no, no the fuck it wasn't. His name was La-June....
Words have meaning.
But...but...This guy says it's Le Jernnnn!
http://spectrumlocalnews.com/n...ejeune-pronunciationOctober 06, 2017, 07:02 PM
egregoreLike pronouncing Qatar (rhymes, appropriately, with catarrh) "cutter," or Braaaaack pronouncing Pakistan "pocky-ston" while corpsman is "corpse-man." Pretentious assholes trying to sound sophisticated.
October 06, 2017, 07:39 PM
Gustoferquote:
Originally posted by egregore:
Pretentious assholes trying to sound sophisticated.
That, and steering as far away from "nig-ger" as anyone could possibly get.
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October 06, 2017, 07:45 PM
downtownvquote:
Originally posted by Gustofer:
quote:
Originally posted by egregore:
Pretentious assholes trying to sound sophisticated.
That, and steering as far away from "nig-ger" as anyone could possibly get.
Thats what it used to be called...unacceptable since bill chiton and the introduction of PC.
October 06, 2017, 08:10 PM
flashguyWell, I always pronounced it Ny-JUR.
flashguy
Texan by choice, not accident of birth October 06, 2017, 09:45 PM
46and2What I was taught is:
Nigeria should sound like Ny-jeer-ia.
Niger should sound like Ny-jheer.
And neither sounds like Nigger, nor each other....
I don't think there's anything pretentious about it.
Foreign words often sound... wait for it... foreign.
It's like Iraq and Iran (there is no I sound in either, it's an E sound).
Or like Wang (there is no Long A sound in Chinese, it's an Ah sound).
What seems to happen a lot is that many people have heard it wrong for so long, and others butcher it so badly, that when someone does it right it sounds funny to some. This is compounded by immigrants who either had it butchered so long they gave up or they're so many generations away from their immigrant fore-person that it got mangled in between. All the while those in the News are all over the board, so most everyone is confused.
It's kind of like that scene in Idiocracy where they accuse him of taking like a fag because he's articulate and uses bigger words.
October 06, 2017, 10:24 PM
sjtillIt’s likely both the English and the French pronunciations regarding the same river would sound foreign to the locals. Former French colony, if you go there the locals still speak French and pronounce it Ni-Jheer. In Nigeria the English-speaking locals pronounce it NI-djer.
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October 06, 2017, 10:34 PM
vinnybassI thought the French pronunciation was nee-ZHAY.
"We're all travelers in this world. From the sweet grass to the packing house. Birth 'til death. We travel between the eternities." October 06, 2017, 11:05 PM
redleg2/9Only you honkies have to pronounce it "Ni-jheer".
The brothers say it the way it is.
.
October 07, 2017, 05:10 AM
kz1000
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October 07, 2017, 05:12 AM
tacfoleyNee-zhair, says my next-door neighbour, who was a missionary there for three years.
tac
October 07, 2017, 05:29 AM
FredwardBecause so many foreign countries struggle to pronounce America with and America sound, right? I'm going with pretentious.
October 07, 2017, 08:09 AM
joel9507FWIW, I have always pronounced it like "Nigeria" minus the "ia."
As I recall, both countries' names derive from the Latin word for 'black'. I don't know Latin but I would suspect the traditional pronunciation would be derived from that.
October 07, 2017, 08:44 AM
Oat_Action_ManMy digging suggests that the country is named after the river of the same name and that the river may be named such because of a misunderstanding of the Berber name for the river, "ger-n-ger". Like how our Connecticut is a butchering of an Algonquian word or phrase.
Apparently the river isn't silty, so calling it "black" in Latin (i.e.
niger) would be odd.
Perhaps likely is that the Europeans heard something remotely similar to
niger, a word they knew, and just rolled with that, rather than it having anything to do with the qualities of the river itself, let alone the the pigmentation of the people.
Related, unfortunately amusing story: last year my class was looking at a map of the Mediterranean, on which Libya and Egypt were the southernmost countries. One particularly ditzy girl asked, "Can you pull the map down further so I can see Niger?" Every other kid in the class looked at her with the most profound look of "WTF?" on their faces.
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October 07, 2017, 08:48 AM
220-9erIt was a French colony until around 1960 so it's not surprising it is spelled and has a French pronunciation.
That's the same as it was when I first studied geography back in the dark ages.
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