List of places in the United States with counterintuitive pronunciations: M–Z

This list is a sublist of List of names in English with counterintuitive pronunciations.

Place names in the United States of America

M

N

O

P

Q

R

S

T

V

W

Y

Z

See also

Notes and References

Notes
  1. c.f. the obvious final syllable of Miami, Florida
  2. All derived from Montpellier, France /m
  3. equivalent to the British English pronunciation of Moscow, Russia. Other Moscows in America are /ˈmɒsk/, the American English pronunciation of the Russian city.
  4. The pronunciation /nəˈvɑːdə/, while fairly common (particularly in the eastern United States), is stigmatized locally.
  5. cf. Newark, New Jersey /ˈnərk/ and cf Newark, Delaware and Newark, New York /ˈnɑːrk/ generally
  6. Traditionally locally /ˈnwɔərlnz/ with a very light w is used, i.e. between the local and national.
  7. Identical to the English county of Norfolk, and intuitive given the common word folk. Popular navy wordplay notwithstanding, the vowel in the last syllable is unstressed, very short, and closed, as in foot. Locals born in or after the last half of the 20th Century, who have partly or wholly adopted the American Broadcast Accent, often pronounce it /ˈnɔːrfɪk/ with the r substituted for /ɻ/
  8. cf. Palestine: /ˈpælstn/
  9. cf. the regular American pronunciation of "Christian", /ˈkrɪsən/
  10. Not intuitive /ˈp.ˈbɒdi/
  11. cf. common and well-known Spanish approximations elsewhere.
  12. Or intuitively per Spanish among Hispanics
  13. Italian ruined city pronounced /pɒmˈp/)
  14. c.f. Raleigh surname and brands traditionally said like Wall
  15. Locally.
  16. In everyday speech a glottal stop replaces the /tə/ in the second syllable. In careful or formal speech, the /t/ is clearly pronounced, but the vowel is pronounced as a schwa.
  17. Not /vækæ/
  18. Same as examples in England such as London Borough of Waltham Forest. cf. greatly US well-known comparators.
  19. Woburn, Bedfordshire and Woburn, Toronto are simply /ˈwbərn/
  20. Mispronounced as /ˈwstər/
  21. As per traditional English town, county and sauce
  22. Though the pronunciation /ˈjækəmə/ is also heard. The Native American people for whom the river, city, and county are named now prefer the spelling Yakama.

    Further reading

    External links

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