How do you pronounce this - part 2? | The Boneyard

How do you pronounce this - part 2?

How do you pronounce the word pecan?

  • PE-can

    Votes: 15 20.8%
  • pe-CAN

    Votes: 18 25.0%
  • pe-CAHN

    Votes: 34 47.2%
  • Another way

    Votes: 5 6.9%

  • Total voters
    72

HuskyNan

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If you chose "another way", how do you pronounce it?
 
I had to select "another way". I don't think I am consistent with this one. Partly because folks in my life have pronounced it differently.

puh-CAHN - or something like it was my Grandmother. PEE -cann or pee-CANN - more the first one, I think, usually in conversation. Pe-CAHN seems natural.

That's the problem when you both grow up with different pronunciations and don't say it often (I don't eat them).

There are a lot of Pecan Trees near Tucson and in the southwest in general, FWIW.
 
If you chose "another way", how do you pronounce it?

Proper pronunciation is pick-AHN.

If you pronounce it as PEE-can, then you are probably from the Northeast, northeastern part of Pennsylvania and most of New Jersery, and the Atlantic shore areas of North Carolina and Virginia.

If you pronounce it as PEE-kahn, then you are probably from Northern Wisconsin and Northeast Minnesota. Also you would be a Yooper.

Those who use the correct pronunciation (pick-AHN) are from Louisiana, southern Mississippi, southern Arkansas, most of northern Texas and most all of Oklahoma, and on the border of southeast Missouri and southwest Illinois.

Everyone else says pee-KAHN.
 
I'm just terrible. I alternate between PE-can and pe-Cahn. Schizophrenia is a helluva thing. For instance, when eating them out of a bottle, can or bowl I say PE-cans. When it's in a pie or such I say pe-Cahn, actually pick-Cahn.
 
There is no "h" in pecan, why pronounce the word as if there is.
 
There is no "h" in pecan, why pronounce the word as if there is.
It is the American version of the English language which is rife with strangeness and inconsistencies.
 
It is the American version of the English language which is rife with strangeness and inconsistencies.
I wholeheartedly agree, but strangeness aside, given the regional differences in pronunciation, it seems to me that there is as much inconsistency among the people as in the language.
Interesting that the correct pronunciation is not necessarily the one that most closely approximates the spelling.
 

I think that is reported incorrectly (or it's the results of faulty research). It has all of New England saying PE-can, which I never heard till I moved south. I grew up saying pe-CAN, as did virtually everyone I grew up with. As you got further into northern New England, there was some pe-CAHN, which is also common in the southern Atlantic states. But in the years I spent in Connecticut and Maine, I never heard a native put the accent on the first syllable.
 
It is the American version of the English language which is rife with strangeness and inconsistencies.

That is why English as a second language is so hard for folks to learn. Words like since, sense and cents drive them crazy. As do words like There, their and they're. There are some folks that use English as their FIRST language, that are still working on those. Not to mention read and read depending on the context. :D
 
I checked #2 but now after some natural practice...its PE-can.
 
It is the American version of the English language which is rife with strangeness and inconsistencies.

The British would wholeheartedly disagree that we speak English in the U.S.
 

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