I think of it as Tee Enneh Zeytah. 

On a different matter, I was pleased to note in some videos in TNZ that I'm also not the only Brit here who reads/says 'Tee Enn Zee' even though in every other context I think of 'Z' as 'Zed'.
:thumbs:\'Z' as 'Zed'.
That lost ground to "hello" a long time ago.And here I thought the English form would be 'hullo'.![]()
My language and spelling is generally British because I was taught that and generally write for an exclusively British audience. But I refuse to be the idiot who once told me off for saying 'Hi' to him because the English is 'hello'. Both forms of English (as well as, no doubt, all the other myriad of forms I get less exposure to) have their pros and cons, there is nothing wrong in my eyes with evolving English by borrowing from 'itself' just as we've spent centuries borrowing from others.
The word 'hello' as a greeting predates the telephone (The Oxford English Dictionary gives the first recorded use of it in 1827, but it generally was not used in such a widespread fashion. the word was more often used as a means of attracting someone's attention ("Hello, what do you think you're doing?") or to express some form of mild surprise ("Hello, what have we here?"). An editorial aside in the same dictionary states that "Thomas Edison is popularly credited with instigating the practice of saying 'hello' when answering the telephone ...and the word's subsequent popularity as a greeting. His rival, Alexander Graham Bell, preferred that 'ahoy' be used." (Indeed, Bell insisted on answering the phone with 'ahoy' for all the rest of his days)
Yep, so many words sounding the same but spelt differently, each having it's own meaning. Metre and Meter being another one.Also pore, which has yet another meaning.Well pour can be spelt poor, but of course that changes it's meaning.
As for centre was has been mentioned, perhaps it's spelt that way because maybe it's derived from the word central.
I think of it as Tee Enneh Zeytah.![]()
Of course, the only acceptable way to answer the phone is 'pronto' ('ready') which was used by Antonio Meucci, the real inventor of the telephone.The word 'hello' as a greeting predates the telephone (The Oxford English Dictionary gives the first recorded use of it in 1827, but it generally was not used in such a widespread fashion. the word was more often used as a means of attracting someone's attention ("Hello, what do you think you're doing?") or to express some form of mild surprise ("Hello, what have we here?"). An editorial aside in the same dictionary states that "Thomas Edison is popularly credited with instigating the practice of saying 'hello' when answering the telephone ...and the word's subsequent popularity as a greeting. His rival, Alexander Graham Bell, preferred that 'ahoy' be used." (Indeed, Bell insisted on answering the phone with 'ahoy' for all the rest of his days)
And you are way much classier than me, my friend, because it sounds much more like a porn star name to my ears...Sounds like the stage name of a movie actress or something: Tienna Zeta, born Gertrude Zompf.I think of it as Tee Enneh Zeytah.![]()
Of course, the only acceptable way to answer the phone is 'pronto' ('ready') which was used by Antonio Meucci, the real inventor of the telephone.![]()
Of course, the only acceptable way to answer the phone is 'pronto' ('ready') which was used by Antonio Meucci, the real inventor of the telephone.![]()
Of course, the only acceptable way to answer the phone is 'pronto' ('ready') which was used by Antonio Meucci, the real inventor of the telephone.
Tru dat. Italians love the sound of their own (loud) voice, and mobile phones give us the opportunity to TALK TO EVERYBODY EVERYWHERE ALL THE TIME.And nobody should argue with somebody from the most (cell) phone-crazy nation on earth.
Funny, because it doesn't sound rude in my mind, except maybe because "pronto" it's a harsher sound than "hello". It's a contraction of "Sono pronto" ("I'm ready"), which is a rather polite (and amusingly detached) thing to say to answer the phone.I always wondered why Italians did that because it sounded kind of rude to me, like how Klingons answer comm signals with "What do you want?". This board is so educational.
"Pronto" or "Meucci"?Was also the name of a really good Italian restaurant in Darling Harbour.
And you are way much classier than me, my friend, because it sounds much more like a porn star name to my ears...Sounds like the stage name of a movie actress or something: Tienna Zeta, born Gertrude Zompf.I think of it as Tee Enneh Zeytah.![]()
![]()
Of course, the only acceptable way to answer the phone is 'pronto' ('ready') which was used by Antonio Meucci, the real inventor of the telephone.![]()
Of course, the only acceptable way to answer the phone is 'pronto' ('ready') which was used by Antonio Meucci, the real inventor of the telephone.The word 'hello' as a greeting predates the telephone (The Oxford English Dictionary gives the first recorded use of it in 1827, but it generally was not used in such a widespread fashion. the word was more often used as a means of attracting someone's attention ("Hello, what do you think you're doing?") or to express some form of mild surprise ("Hello, what have we here?"). An editorial aside in the same dictionary states that "Thomas Edison is popularly credited with instigating the practice of saying 'hello' when answering the telephone ...and the word's subsequent popularity as a greeting. His rival, Alexander Graham Bell, preferred that 'ahoy' be used." (Indeed, Bell insisted on answering the phone with 'ahoy' for all the rest of his days)![]()
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