Set the record straight, how do you say Tomato? This has caused many conflicts in my life. Lets settle this shit.I say Tomaito, what you say?
11/2/2011 9:19:21 PM
mater
11/2/2011 9:20:19 PM
Shit. An unexpected option.
11/2/2011 9:21:33 PM
Tormato
11/2/2011 9:23:10 PM
ketchup
11/2/2011 9:25:32 PM
11/2/2011 9:25:34 PM
i never just say tomato, i always say "and no tomato please"[Edited on November 2, 2011 at 9:26 PM. Reason : f]
11/2/2011 9:26:25 PM
i've never met anyone who actually pronounces it "tomahto"[Edited on November 2, 2011 at 9:30 PM. Reason : typo]
11/2/2011 9:30:01 PM
I usually say, "Bring me your finest blood fruit dwarf!"
11/2/2011 9:31:48 PM
japanese people say to-mah-towithout the emphasis on "mah"sick burn
11/2/2011 9:33:06 PM
all I know is thank god they exist... otherwise we wouldnt have BBQ sauce right!?
11/2/2011 9:40:26 PM
You say tomato, I say another stupid ass merbig thread
11/2/2011 9:42:49 PM
^^ Well yeah. Can you make BBQ Sauce any other way?And why can you people never reach a fucking consensus?
11/2/2011 10:00:30 PM
of course not
11/2/2011 10:00:58 PM
eastern>western
11/2/2011 10:07:17 PM
I thought this whole thing related to how Americans talk and British talk
11/2/2011 10:08:43 PM
vinegar is used for cleaning and douches
11/2/2011 10:09:03 PM
maytersLets throw this one out there as well. pee-can or pea-conI'm from the south. I saw pee-can.
11/2/2011 10:13:28 PM
tuh-mae-da
11/3/2011 12:02:30 AM
The way the Brits and Aussies say it (tuh-MAH-toh) is closer to the etymology (Spanish tomate, from Nahuatl tomatl), while the pronunciation where I grew up and in the Northeast and West Coast is "tuh-MEY-toh"; also in the South it's "tuh-MEY-tuh" and in Canada it's either the New England pronunciation or "tuh-MA-toh"As for "potato" the only real regional difference is in the long "o" sound, which happens in most uses: American English uses the Spanish "o" sound followed by the "w" sound, while British English uses the schwa followed by the "w" sound. The pronunciation "puh-TAH-toh" is nonstandard wherever you go; also the etymology is a bit different, from Spanish patata, from Taino batata.(BTW, there's also a noticeable difference in rhoticization, so that in pronouncing "her," speakers on each side of the Atlantic use a vowel that people on the other side do not use; a similar issue explains why hearing a native Bostonian talk about Harvard Yard sounds so funny.)
11/3/2011 12:48:32 AM
^sounds about right.I really do enjoy linguistics... for some strange reason
11/3/2011 9:10:08 AM
Tomaito
11/3/2011 9:17:24 AM
Tuh-MAY-toePuh-KAHN
11/3/2011 9:23:07 AM
to-may-topee-can
11/3/2011 9:30:21 AM