Vince wrote:cthia wrote:Is it Marshbanks?
I didn't know it John. My niece is visiting. She spilled the beans.
During my stay in California, I was confronted with the name Beauchamp. Which I pronounced Bowchamp. Everyone looked at me rather humorously. It is Beechum. My wife says Forcester is Foster. Many people mispronounce Camp Lejeune as LeJune. It is LeZhern.
Which I suspect would be pronounced as Lejern on Safehold. And probably spelled Lyzhyrn.
WeirdlyWired wrote: If Worchester is pronounced Wooster, why isn't Dorchester pronounced Dooster?
Try Meaux (hint short for mayonaisse), Hebert (just one critter with a rifle), Latiolais, St. Cyr, and all the weird names in my family tree.
The confusion comes in the way it is spelled. To be fair, it is Worcester without the "h." Any name ending in chester seems to have a "natural" pronunciation. Gloucester is Gloster.
My niece found another and I threw it at my wife. She correctly translated Featherstonehaugh as Fanshaw. Goes to show, you can't screw a Brit up any more than they already are.
"Ouch! Sorry hon!!"
I think all the trips to London breathing in all that heavy fog fogged many a Brit's brain as bad as any of Grayson's heavy metals. I guess it was hard for them to spell Fanshaw under the effects of alco-fog.
"Ouch!!! You just broke your shoe heel!"
"Ouch! Okay okay, you got a matching set now!"