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How is Aspergers pronunced?
Poll ended at 11 Feb 2005, 1:35 pm
Burgers 38%  38%  [ 16 ]
Burgers 38%  38%  [ 16 ]
Mergers 12%  12%  [ 5 ]
Mergers 12%  12%  [ 5 ]
Total votes : 42

neotopian
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04 Feb 2005, 1:35 pm

OK. So this is the thing I have had it and I want to know the answer to a very pressing question.

How is Aspergers pronunced?

I have heard it said two ways and I am none the wiser.

So is it with a hard or soft "g"

Does it rhyme with "burgers" small roung patties of meat traditionally served in a bun, or does it rhyme with "mergers" (plural noun) the action of joining together most often used in the world of commerce.

So in the first of (I hope) weekly "pointless polls" I ask you.

Meat or Business?



Young_fogey
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04 Feb 2005, 2:50 pm

I first heard it pronounced with a hard g, which makes sense because its Austrian discoverer, Dr Hans Asperger, had a German name.

Didn't give it any thought until somebody I wrote to about it pronounced it to rhyme with 'merger'.

So I still stay it rhymes with 'burger' because of the language the name comes from.

(Unlike the longstanding custom in English of changing the pronunciation of French words it adopts.)



Rekkr
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04 Feb 2005, 5:39 pm

Ass-per-jers

That's how I say it.



Young_fogey
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04 Feb 2005, 6:09 pm

I'm grateful to Dr A but still sometimes I cringe at the kiddie name-calling possibilities in his name just because it has the sound 'ass' in it: 'Ass-burger'.

Why couldn't we have had a cool name in English like ('Simpsons' reference to the power of names) 'Max Power syndrome'? LOL.



JayShaw
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04 Feb 2005, 7:51 pm

Quote:
So I still stay it rhymes with 'burger' because of the language the name comes from.


Young_fogey is correct. The "hard" g is appropriate.



TAFKASH
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04 Feb 2005, 9:13 pm

JayShaw wrote:
Quote:
So I still stay it rhymes with 'burger' because of the language the name comes from.


Young_fogey is correct. The "hard" g is appropriate.


Uh-oh.... I feel a pedantic discussion about pronunciations of foreign names in English coming on..... must.... fight.... evil...... nggggggg!! !!


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Last edited by TAFKASH on 05 Feb 2005, 5:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.

hale_bopp
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04 Feb 2005, 10:35 pm

I always thought it had a "j" sound. Voted Mergers.



vetivert
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05 Feb 2005, 1:34 am

Young_fogey wrote:
(Unlike the longstanding custom in English of changing the pronunciation of French words it adopts.)


LOL. JUST French, young fogey? i think the English can marmalise ANY foreign-sounding words... ;)

i am reminded of Edward Heath's famous Euro speech... cringe.

anyway, hard "g" it is. otherwise, it's a bit like the Latin "aspergus", which always makes me giggle - a syndrome which involves sprinkling people with water.