• Welcome to the FREE TUGBBS forums! The absolute best place for owners to get help and advice about their timeshares for more than 32 years!

    Join Tens of Thousands of other owners just like you here to get any and all Timeshare questions answered 24 hours a day!
  • TUG started 32 years ago in October 1993 as a group of regular Timeshare owners just like you!

    Read about our 32nd anniversary: Happy 32nd Birthday TUG!
  • TUG has a YouTube Channel to produce weekly short informative videos on popular Timeshare topics!

    All subscribers auto-entered to win all free TUG membership giveaways!

    Visit TUG on Youtube!
  • TUG has now saved timeshare owners more than $24,000,000 dollars just by finding us in time to rescind a new Timeshare purchase! A truly incredible milestone!

    Read more here: TUG saves owners more than $24 Million dollars
  • Wish you could meet up with other TUG members? Well look no further as this annual event has been going on for years in Orlando! How to Attend the TUG January Get-Together!
  • Now through the end of the year you can join or renew your TUG membership at the lowest price ever offered! Learn More!
  • Sign up to get the TUG Newsletter for free!

    Tens of thousands of subscribing owners! A weekly recap of the best Timeshare resort reviews and the most popular topics discussed by owners!
  • Our official "end my sales presentation early" T-shirts are available again! Also come with the option for a free membership extension with purchase to offset the cost!

    All T-shirt options here!
  • A few of the most common links here on the forums for newbies and guests!

The Most Mispronounced State in the U.S.

Not difficult - but mispronounced by many people who don't live in the west:

Ne-VA-da (A as in at) is correct.

NOT

Ne-VAH-da (A as in raw)

YAY ME! - I got that without looking!
 
Well, gosh. Who knew? As I was driving through Lost Wages, I wondered if residents of Mesquite are referred to as Mesquiters... :D

Dave

(P.S. I've said it as "Ne-VAD-uh"since I was stationed at Nellis Air Force Base in North Las Vegas 46 years ago...)
 
The most mispronounce City in the Commonwealth of Virginia is
Portsmouth. Locals called it Portsmith. This is inside joke for Brett from Newport News, VA. LOL.

I always thought it would be Norfolk. You can destroy that name in several ways, some more X-rated than others. The best I heard was a girl, born and raised there, who pronounced it "Nahf-ICK." :D

Dave
 
I had a friend who served as the Executive Officer on the USS West Virginia for a few years. One time they ordered a bunch of jackets with the ship name on them and discovered that they were misspelled as "USS West Virgina". Needless to say, they never wound up giving them out to the crew....
 
I had a friend who served as the Executive Officer on the USS West Virginia for a few years. One time they ordered a bunch of jackets with the ship name on them and discovered that they were misspelled as "USS West Virgina". Needless to say, they never wound up giving them out to the crew....

Back in the late 70's, the town of Bellingham, Washington, ordered a bunch of t-shirts with the city name, to hand out as promo gifts at a city fundraiser to promote tourism in the city. To the great shock to some, and incredible amusement to others, when the shirts arrived, they discovered the printer had accidentally replaced the E with an A. Needless to say, those shirts became instant best sellers. :D

Dave
 
Many cities that get mispronounced that I'm aware of are those with Spanish origins.

La Jolla - it's not La Jolla, but La Hoya
Pecos - depends on where you're from I guess. I've heard both PAY COS or PEH COS and both seem to be correct.
Madrid - in New Mexico supposedly the correct pronunciation is MAD RID not MAH DRID, but I've heard it both ways. Same with Cuba. Correct is KOO BAH, not QUE BAH.
 
In St. Louis Mo. - the state to the immediate east & across the Mississippi River is often pronounced : IL-IN-NOISE ( Illinois).

Of course any Missouri politician needs to make sure they know what part of the state they are in when pronouncing their own state’s name.

east (St. Louis area) - Missour-EE
west & sw (Kansas City / Springfield etc.) - Missour- AH

the split does not align completely with Cardinal - Royal geography - but that would a good starting point.
_____
lived in St. Louis area 1978- 1990
travelled Missouri , Kansas & So. Illinois
 
Last edited:
I also got Nevada right off the bat because I have a lot of trouble pronouncing it correctly. That's because I live in Southern California where so many people speak Spanish, so I tend to pronounce it as if it were a Spanish word. It actually is a Spanish word - nevada means snow-covered.

My mom lives in San Antonio, Texas. They really massacre place names there. She lives in Bexar county, which is pronounced "Bear." She's not too far from Boerne, which is pronounced "Bernie." A major local street is Blanco, which means white in Spanish, but they pronounce it "Blank-o."
 
Newark, Delaware is often mispronouced too.
 
We got laughed at several years ago when we exchanged to DuBois PA. Being Canadian and conscious of the French language DH & I were pronouncing it as if it was a French name. The nice young girl at the check-in desk advised us that we should be pronouncing it as if it was spelled Dewboyz! We told her that she probably shouldn't ever travel to Quebec. :D

~Diane
 
The article is incorrect for Oregon. We that live in Oregon pronounce it as Ory gun. No gin.
 
People are starting to catch on to Boy-See. There's no z in it, but you'd never tell my wife and she's lived here for over 40 years. We have our share of wide spots in the road with odd names. Weipe (WeeYipe), Picabo (peek-a-boo), Coeur d'Alene (Core-duh-Lane).

Jim
 
Buena Vista in Colorado is pronounced Bew-na Vista. That was hard for me to get used to coming from California!
 
Michigan has so many fun city names. A mix of French, Polish, Finnish and Native American names makes them difficult.

The Mackinac Bridge, Hamtramck, Ypsilanti, Charlevoix, Tahquamenon Falls, Ocqueoc, Bete Grise, Bois Blanc and Sault Ste. Marie. are just a few of the city names that even Michganders get wrong. Even some of the major Detroit road names are rather interesting. Gratiot, Schoenherr and Livernois make driving interesting.

Even some of the normal names are pronounced weird. Lake Orion is pronounced Oar-ee-on not O-Rye-on. Charlotte is pronounced Shar-lot. Even Grand Blanc is pronounced Grand Blank.
 
IMHO - the most mispronounced state names have to Hawai'i and be Oregon. In Hawai'ian the w is pronounced as a soft "v". Also the two "i"s don't slide into each other (they are not a dipthong). There is a vocal catch between them (as in "uh-oh"), which is indicated by the ' in the spelling.

Oregon is pronounced much like the musical instrument, except for a very slight, almost inaudible schwa between the R and G. Not pronounced or-uh-GON'.
 
Not difficult - but mispronounced by many people who don't live in the west:

Ne-VA-da (A as in at) is correct.

NOT

Ne-VAH-da (A as in raw)

YAY ME! - I got that without looking!
Nope.

Nevada is the Spanish word for snowy. In Spanish, a is always pronounced like a in ah, not as a in at. A as in "at" is sound that does not exist in Spanish.

I some ways pronouncing the a in Nevada with the same sound as "at" is like calling a "tah-co" a "tack-o". Both are Spanish words, with a pronounced as "ah".

That being said, their is some "slippage" when we import words into English. Sometimes we retain the pronunciation (and spelling) in the original language, but other times we modify it. So we do have some some slippage of the "ah" to the conventional English short "a" sound. All of the "San" city names in the names in the southwest are now commonly pronounced as "San", not "Sahn". But Los shifts around some. The Los in Los Angeles is not pronounced Lohs. But it is pronounced Lohs in names such as Los Altos, Los Banos, Los Cruces.

Loma is always "Lohma", not Loma. But we're inconsistent even inside a name. Loma Linda in Spanish would be "Lohma Leendah". So we keep the Spanish on Loma, but substitute the English for Linda, and pronounce it "Lohma Linda".

But in those cases the forms in both languages are equally correct. The mountains in Californian can equally be Sierra Ne-va-da or Ne-vah-da. It's perfectly fine to call Los Angeles as "Lohs Ang-hel'-ace". San Francisco can be "Sahn fran-Cees'-co".

Getting back to Nevada, both forms are equally correct in my opinion. When I'm conversing with my Latin American friends in English, they always pronounce it Nev-Ah'-dah.
 
Nope.

Nevada is the Spanish word for snowy. In Spanish, a is always pronounced like a in ah, not as a in at. A as in "at" is sound that does not exist in Spanish.

Nope - Historically, it may have started as a Spanish word, but in modern usage, that's not how it's pronounced in Nevada or the West Coast. In fact, it annoys people if you do - similar to people calling San Francisco, "Frisco."
 
Nope - Historically, it may have started as a Spanish word, but in modern usage, that's not how it's pronounced in Nevada or the West Coast. In fact, it annoys people if you do - similar to people calling San Francisco, "Frisco."
Or calling California, Cali.
 
Nope - Historically, it may have started as a Spanish word, but in modern usage, that's not how it's pronounced in Nevada or the West Coast. In fact, it annoys people if you do - similar to people calling San Francisco, "Frisco."
Valid, but I would say that I often hear it pronounced about halfway between Ne-va-da and Ne-vah-dah. And I would reiterate that there are differences depending on groups, with Hispanics, in my experience almost always saying Ne-vah-da.

I would say it's similar with Chile the country. Should it be pronounced Chill-ie or Chee'-lay? Depends on who is doing the talking. I've heard it pronounced the second way so often that that's the way it normally comes out of my mouth now. Just as I default to Gwah-tay-MAH-lah instead of Gwah-TUH-mah-la.
 
Top