I pronounce the ‘u’ in ‘pronunciation’ like in ‘putting’ but the ‘ou’ in ‘pronounce’ like in ‘wound’.
Transcript
[The word "Tuesday", with each letter labeled by a box with an arrow:]
T: As in buffet
u: As in minute
e: As in record
s: As in use
d: As in moped
a: As in bass
y: As in gyro
[Caption below the panel:]
Pet peeve: Ambiguous pronunciation guides
- “My name is Perry, not Terry, with a ‘P’ as in ‘Pterodactyl’.” - Pterry 
- “Thompson, with a ‘P’, as in psychology” 
- Yeah… silent Ps are weird 😅 - Depends on your aim. 
- Whatever do you mean, puh-saldorn? 
 
- LOL I forgot where that’s from! 
 
- The english language is … missing some litterary updates. 
 A is pronounced [ei]. E is [ii] and I is [ai]. What’s up with that.- IIUC the problem is that they updated the pronunciation without updating the spelling: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Vowel_Shift 
- I started learning Japanese recently. It’s made me realizehow sloppy English is with vowel sounds. 
 
- oh hey it me 
- /ɪɛzdɛɪaɪ/? - all my troubles seemed so far away? 
- or /ɪɛztɛɪaɪ/ depending on whether you treat the final phoneme of moped as /t/ or /d/ -> [t] - Yep. The ⟨s⟩ in use could also be /s/, I just wrote what first came to mind. - And ⟨e⟩ in record /ɪ/, etc. etc. 
 
 
 
- I didnt know gyro could be pronunced in multiple ways - There’s gyro as in gyroscope, where the Y vowel sound is like the word “eye”, and there’s gyro as in the Greek sandwich where the Y vowel is more like the vowel sound in “sea”. The latter is often seen only as “gyros” because that’s what the actual Greek word is, but because that seems like a plural in English the S is sometimes dropped. - Ohh gyros as in the food lol 
 
- the greek food gyro is kinda pronounced “yee-ro” 
 
- If I’m feeling less lazy and exhausted later I might just have to take voice clips and try to create this variation on pronouncing “Tuesday”. 
- I made an antiphonetic alphabet poster a few years ago to hang at my desk. - It has things like G as in Gnu. Y as in You. - In all fairness, the Y in “you” is totally pronounced. - As is the Y in U. 
 
 





