Elk County Forum

General Category => The Coffee Shop => Topic started by: Delbert on August 23, 2009, 04:32:23 PM

Title: Capital of Kentucky
Post by: Delbert on August 23, 2009, 04:32:23 PM
How do you pronounce the capital of Kentucky, Louisville or Louieville?
Title: Re: Capital of Kentucky
Post by: W. Gray on August 23, 2009, 04:37:56 PM
I am saying Louieville.

Wikipedia says residents say Louaval

Just northeast of us is Louisville, Colorado, and it is pronounced as Lewisville.
Title: Re: Capital of Kentucky
Post by: Rudy Taylor on August 23, 2009, 04:41:49 PM
Any way you want to pronounce it, it's still Frankfort.  ;D
Title: Re: Capital of Kentucky
Post by: patyrn on August 23, 2009, 05:47:50 PM
It definitely is Frankfort--the neighboring "big city" is pronounced Louavull by the natives.  We lived there for a couple of years, and I never did get it down...............always sounded like an "Okie" to them.................................
Title: Re: Capital of Kentucky
Post by: dnalexander on August 23, 2009, 07:47:34 PM
Funny Place Names

How to Talk Virginian
http://www.cohp.org/va/notes/placenames_pronunciation.html

Norfolk - Frequently mispronounced. Properly "NAW-fuk". Really. And make the second syllable as short as possible, almost "fk". Think of, "We don't drink. We don't smoke. Norfolk. Norfolk." If you can make that come out in a humorous manner, you have it exactly right.

How to Speak Thai (According to the Monk in Thailand Blog)
http://monkinthailand.blogspot.com/2008/01/how-do-you-pronounce-phuket.html

Phi Phi, Thailand- is pronounced Pee Pee. They have no f sound

Phuket, Thailand ( According to this guy Jamie it is :)

"Phuket is my home, so I get a bit annoyed sometimes by people saying Fookit or FooKet or anything else with an F sound. There is no F in Phuket, but the transliteration of Thai words is sometimes nearly impossible. You can see signs in Phuket to the same places with slightly different spellings. The "Ph" in Phuket is a hard P sound, but not as hard as a normal "P", slightly softer with undertones of "B"...The island was once called Bukit, which is Malay for "hill"."  Jaime

When in doubt I say Phuket and pronounce it like the locals!
David
Title: Re: Capital of Kentucky
Post by: W. Gray on August 23, 2009, 08:18:17 PM
For the past couple hours or so, I have been experiencing a very serious senior moment wondering why Rudy introduced Deutcheland to this thread. ;D
Title: Re: Capital of Kentucky
Post by: flintauqua on August 23, 2009, 08:30:07 PM
ROFL ;D ;D
Title: Re: Capital of Kentucky
Post by: Rudy Taylor on August 23, 2009, 08:58:08 PM
The original question reminded me of the old one that went: How many elephants did Moses take on the ark with him?

At least, we thought it was funny back in the 1950s when everything was corny, clean and long before Teresa introduced our wonderful little forum to pornography.  ;D
Title: Re: Capital of Kentucky
Post by: flintauqua on August 23, 2009, 09:16:23 PM
If a plane crashes on Stateline Road in Texarkana, in which state do you bury the survivors?
Title: Re: Capital of Kentucky
Post by: kshillbillys on August 23, 2009, 09:20:14 PM
lol...u don't bury survivors! i love silly stuff like this!
Title: Re: Capital of Kentucky
Post by: flintauqua on August 23, 2009, 09:36:23 PM
I once took a vacation and ended up, by pure accident, overnighting in former state or territorial capitals four of the six nights I was gone:  St. Charles, MO; Corydon, IN; Danville, KY; and Knoxville, TN.  With the exception of St. Charles, I had no idea they had been capitals until I started looking through the visitor info I'd picked up in the motel lobby.
Title: Re: Capital of Kentucky
Post by: W. Gray on August 24, 2009, 08:58:59 AM
Speaking of the '50s, would anyone suppose that Groucho Marx started the ball rolling for these types of questions on his "You Bet Your Life" TV show that started in 1950?

His memorable question concerned Grant's Tomb.
Title: Re: Capital of Kentucky
Post by: Delbert on August 24, 2009, 09:50:13 PM
You do better than the students that I substitute.