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Scone vs Scone - How to say it right...

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Nej, nej, nej.

Yawn, Lawn, etc, that's a looooong vowel sound.

I say One, Gone, Bon-bon (a candy), Upon, Monster --- that's a short vowel sound.

Yeah those don't all rhyme though. The length of the vowel sound doesn't matter that much to my ears.

bon-bon = mon = pawn = gone = upon

one = fun = ton = wun = won = gun

scone = bone = flown = moan = shown = prone
 

He won one tonne of scones
Was it one tonne?
Two million
One million

He did a ton of one-frame links. That is why he won. He was number one.


- https://soundcloud.com/izzy-theophilou/finalfinalk -

I can hear myself say them differently. But if it sounds the same to you guy, then it's not my intention and it's probably a side-effect of talking to people on Xbox LIVE. I have to fix that.

I hope that's the finalfinalk because ffs you are saying it all the same, even when you try to emphasise yourself out of it

go to bed, listen to yourself again tomorrow
 
Yeah those don't all rhyme though. The length of the vowel sound doesn't matter that much to my ears.

bon-bon = mon = pawn = gone = upon

one = fun = ton = wun = won = gun

scone = bone = flown = moan = shown = prone

c-c-c-c-combo breaker

;p

I hope that's the finalfinalk because ffs you are saying it all the same, even when you try to emphasise yourself out of it

go to bed, listen to yourself again tomorrow

I'm so confused.
 
Yeah those don't all rhyme though. The length of the vowel sound doesn't matter that much to my ears.

bon-bon = mon = pawn = gone = upon

one = fun = ton = wun = won = gun

scone = bone = flown = moan = shown = prone

Let's see, um...

To my ears, 'gone' rhyming with 'pawn' is batshit.

'one' rhyming with " = fun = ton = wun = won = gun" =batshit

the 'scone' rhymes, all perfectly acceptable because 'scone' has always been a dual-pronunciation word, a region-determinator of sorts. No big deal.

My take: I have zero issues with how people say shit. But folk say shit differently in different places. It's fun to talk about, but it ain't so cool to regulate. And you US folk, I love you (for the most part under certain assumptions) but you all talk all funny anyway. You all have a drawl to my ears. Of sorts.
 
I pronounce it like gone.
The bone way is a bit too Mrs. Bucket for my liking.

Scone
Scon
Scorn

Cone
con
corn


https://soundcloud.com/izzy-theophilou/ifyouclickthisdaviyoungisapoop

Let's see, um...

To my ears, 'gone' rhyming with 'pawn' is batshit.

'one' rhyming with " = fun = ton = wun = won = gun" =batshit

the 'scone' rhymes, all perfectly acceptable because 'scone' has always been a dual-pronunciation word, a region-determinator of sorts. No big deal.

My take: I have zero issues with how people say shit. But folk say shit differently in different places. It's fun to talk about, but it ain't so cool to regulate. And you US folk, I love you (for the most part under certain assumptions) but you all talk all funny anyway. You all have a drawl to my ears. Of sorts.

qft
 
US but my company is based in the UK so I'm there quite frequently and deal with co-workers from there on a daily basis.

I didn't mention that to call you out or something I assure you. I just have to assume that you interact with local, regional, dialectal groups.

I picked up my speech through 33 years of UK residency. I didn't go against the grain or anything. It's just what I heard around me and, for a reasonable part, on TV. For a fair few residents of the UK, one rhymes with gone.
 
one rhymes with gone.

This is what's confusing to me. This is supposed to be true, and is how I intend to say it and hear myself say it.

I can't be saying one = tun, and one = gone at the same time.

I don't think I've ever heard one spoken another way. Or perhaps I've never noticed it.
 
Scone rhymes with gone, otherwise, the following joke doesn't work:

Q: "What's the fastest cake in the world?"

A: "
Scone
!"
 
I didn't mention that to call you out or something I assure you. I just have to assume that you interact with local, regional, dialectal groups.

I picked up my speech through 33 years of UK residency. I didn't go against the grain or anything. It's just what I heard around me and, for a reasonable part, on TV. For a fair few residents of the UK, one rhymes with gone.
Fair enough, what tv were you watching that you think mirrors your dialect?
 
Doesn't sound the same when I say it internally and when I listen back to myself, but apparently people hear me say it the same so meh

EDIT: https://soundcloud.com/izzy-theophilou/periodfarts

Super distinguishable.

EDIT:
Fair enough, what tv were you watching that you think mirrors your dialect?

Fuck, I dunno. Certain bits of TV from 1985 to 1998 I guess. Shit like Cracker, Coronation Street, everyday stuff like Granada News.
 
Nope, Americans are just wrong again.

Unless you think it makes sense that Prawn and Pawn aren't said similar

Unless you say Prahn

Like, Kahn rhymes with Prawn for you guys

Umm, they do sound similar in American English.

Also, not sure how you can be on a high horse when you're inserting invisible "r"s in words!
 
Nooo, 'won' is (can be) a different 'o' vowel sound to the rest. 'On', 'One', can be like 'box', where 'won' is like any un- prefix to a word. ('won' as the past tense of 'win'.)

edit: the english language is a fucking nightmare

I wasn't writing won as in the word, but phonetically

My sincere apologies
 
I own being correct



None doesn't rhyme with gone

I hope it doesn't for you

Of course none rhymes with gone. Of course that really depends on accents here.

As for the thread it definitely is scone, as in gone, or else the fastest biscuit in the world joke doesn't work, and that jokes been around since the 70s at least.
 
Of course none rhymes with gone. Of course that really depends on accents here.

As for the thread it definitely is scone, as in gone, or else the fastest biscuit in the world joke doesn't work, and that jokes been around since the 70s at least.

First of all, it's scone as in cone. It's a posh thing to eat so at the very least the posh (correct) way to say it is more objectively correct than not.

None, (as in "none of them") rhymes with Nun, (as in "The nun prayed")

--

edit: I think you're trying to say non

like non-secular

Nah it doesn't. Nun and gawn would be how I pronounce them.

I made a mistake in my prior post where you called me mental. "Won" != "one"
 
First of all, it's scone as in cone. It's a posh thing to eat so at the very least the posh (correct) way to say it is more objectively correct than not.

None, (as in "none of them") rhymes with Nun, (as in "The nun prayed")

As I said, it depends on your accent. In northern England you certainly don't pronounce none as nun, unless youre a brummie, but that's more middle. In the states it gets different still. There's never one way to say one word. It depends where you're from obviously.

Plus, the joke doesn't work if you pronounce it scown. Which is why you shouldn't.
 
As I said, it depends on your accent. In northern England you certainly don't pronounce none as nun, unless youre a brummie, but that's more middle. In the states it gets different still. There's never one way to say one word. It depends where you're from obviously.

Plus, the joke doesn't work if you pronounce it scown. Which is why you shouldn't.

Scown? Like Brown? -- (forget it)

https://twitter.com/shitjokes/status/716530332510654464
Len Finsbury knows what's up
 
Exactly. S-gone. That's the whole point of the joke.

pleb joke
anyway yeah, i have no problem with it being said differently and I understand the vast majority say it like that. the awn stuff was why I really started to post here

--

since someone in this thread said high horse

IgANY9k.png
 
No matter how you pronounce it, eating a Skawn sounds nasty. Sounds like a spoiled prawn.
 
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