Tuna Pronunciation

CHOONA or TOONA

  • Choona

    Votes: 31 23.0%
  • Toona

    Votes: 99 73.3%
  • Other (Specify)

    Votes: 5 3.7%

  • Total voters
    135
I'll fight anyone who comes up to me and says "Choona"

you'd fight poor ole Dudley Moore?! that's who i think of re "Choo-na," with Liza Minella at the end of "Arthur," him saying "Would you make me a choo-na fish sandwich?"

- - - Post Merge - - -

its just the way Brits inflect the "t" so close to the "u," they keep the "university" sound of long "u" with a little "y" sound at the start of the "u." we yanks use the "oo" sound of long "u" after consonants instead of the "yoo" sound.

Brits also put an "r" sounds in some words where there's no "r." like "strawr-berry" (heh, or "Strarbree" for some) ;)
 
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I'll fight anyone who comes up to me and says "Choona"

Choona

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Chuna. I think using a hard T is an American thing, as with saying 'toob' instead of 'chube'. Hey, at least the real spelling is kind of a mix. Wanted to find a couple clips to demonstrate, but meh.
 
Choona is so wrong it makes me want to punch a wall omfg.

If you think about it, it's really not. U makes a 'you' sound when it's a long u, and even americans e.g. say university (YOU-niversity), not 'oo-niversity'. We brits (and some others) also keep long U as a 'you' sound when there is a consonant in front. So it turns out as 't-you-na', which, when said fast, is basically 'choona'.
 
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If you think about it, it's really not. U makes a 'you' sound when it's a long u, and even americans e.g. say university (YOU-niversity), not 'oo-niversity'. We brits (and some others) also keep U as a 'you' sound when there is a consonant in front. So it turns out as 't-you-na', which, when said fast, is basically 'choona'.

really i never used the t there as ch so it's still tyuuna or tew-nah for me x)
 
If you think about it, it's really not. U makes a 'you' sound when it's a long u, and even americans e.g. say university (YOU-niversity), not 'oo-niversity'. We brits (and some others) also keep long U as a 'you' sound when there is a consonant in front. So it turns out as 't-you-na', which, when said fast, is basically 'choona'.

All I can think about is iCarly.
 
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