just point out what it stands for ALuminium - NIckel - CObalt, that should make the pronunciation fairly obvious
+1
Here's another one: is Hamer pronounced "hammer" or "hay-mer"?
I've always said "hammer" but most people seem to say "hay-mer", and I read somewhere that that's the correct pronunciation. But if that's the case, why did they have Hamer-lock tuners and the Hamer Slammer line?
:?
It's Haymer because
1) thats what Paul Hamer says
2) Because of the magic E rule in teaching language which makes the A sound ay rather than ah (my mother is a special needs teacher teaching language)
And Feline is not pronounced Feleeny either!
Although i have had letters addressed to Sea Lion guitars - obviously some people dont hear it right over the phone
true, however i assume hamer is of germanic origin, which would be pronounced "hammer". Though obviously it's been anglicised by now. Like Van Halen, I'd assume in dutch it's pronounced "hallen"...
As for other ones, I think americans pronounce "Les Paul" as "Less Paul", as it's short for "Lester". I still can't get my head round that, and just outright refuse.
:lol:
Heres another one
Bush being pronounced as Arse (especiullay if it's preceeded by a W) ;)
DiMarzio seems to cayse a lot of people to add a T into it for some reason (something like Di Matzio for some reason)
Hmmm I will have to listen to my copy of "The Who reside in Leeds"
Lol at bush, Blair is pronounced the same way, strangely.
I whack a t in dimarzio (dimartsio) too. I assume it's italian... noodle has a good point about the double z, though, i might have to look into that. i know that in german one z is "ts"...