dugsuth wrote:I aussify the name to "TRAN-YA" personally....
Franco wrote:I avoided that problem by getting a Caldera Cone
dugsuth wrote:I aussify the name to "TRAN-YA" personally....
ollster wrote:dugsuth wrote:I aussify the name to "TRAN-YA" personally....
Tranny.
ollster wrote:dugsuth wrote:I aussify the name to "TRAN-YA" personally....
Tranny.
dugsuth wrote:I aussify the name to "TRAN-YA" personally....
stuey69 wrote:TRAN-GIA ... the G is hard, like in god.
Like in many languages, the R is rolled.
Tortoise wrote:dugsuth wrote:I aussify the name to "TRAN-YA" personally....
Interesting, as we have the same sounds in Aussie English (even spelt the same way sometimes),as in Swedish.
Not a criticism, just fascinating for a linguistic nerd.As a lingusitic colleague once quoted - English spelling has many undigested bits of its history. So many possible pronunciations of letters. Glad I learnt it as my mother tongue.
Strider wrote:Tortoise wrote:dugsuth wrote:I aussify the name to "TRAN-YA" personally....
Interesting, as we have the same sounds in Aussie English (even spelt the same way sometimes),as in Swedish.
Not a criticism, just fascinating for a linguistic nerd.As a lingusitic colleague once quoted - English spelling has many undigested bits of its history. So many possible pronunciations of letters. Glad I learnt it as my mother tongue.
Did this go over your head?
STRAYA!!!
ryantmalone wrote:The correct pronunciation for Trangia is "tran jee yah".
At least, that's how their Aussie suppliers pronounced it last time I saw them.
alanoutgear wrote:Trangia or "Trange" - from the ancient Swedish, meaning "very slow cooking device that takes up too much space in your Viking longship"
Tortoise wrote:ryantmalone wrote:The correct pronunciation for Trangia is "tran jee yah".
At least, that's how their Aussie suppliers pronounced it last time I saw them.
Not correct according to the Swedes! I get that we anglicise things in lots of interesting ways when there is no corresponding sound in English, but in this case we have the same sounds that we could have used.
stuey69 wrote:Just listened to the Swedish pronunciation, pretty well as we say it here anyway.
That's a surprise. I've lived in NSW, VIC & Tassie, and don't remember ever hearing it pronounced that way.Like in many languages, the R is rolled.
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