Spyke

Reilly: Dary, do you know how many dudes are jerking off to your girlfriend right now? Yew! Jonesy: Wait, I actually know the answer. Yew. Sixteen point one thousand. Yew!

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otp
sh.itjust.works

Canadians here.

It's "double-you", but if spoken quickly, it can become "dub-you"

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neidu3reply
sh.itjust.works

Non native speaker, and both of those hold true for me as well. Unless I'm referencing a hostname with www in it; then I just say dub-dub-dub

5

Apparently people who speak English

The French, Polish, Dutch, etc. are now reclassified as Asians

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Semjazareply
lemmynsfw.com

I love to poke at people's conception of Western with these questions:

Is New Zealand Western?
Is Japan Western?
Is Brazil Western?
Is South Africa Western?
Is Kenya Western?
Is Lebanon Western?
Is Israel Western?
Is Hungary Western?
Is Finland Western?
Is Russia Western?
Is Armenia Western?

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Omegareply
discuss.online

If your nation was within NATO, it's likely western If after the collapse of the USSR, your nation joined EU, it's likely western And anything outside this category would be third world or eastern (Russia, China, Vietnam)

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Semjazareply
lemmynsfw.com

I realise you were just offering a hueristic, but Ironically all of the three countries you listed were Second World nations. (I've also never heard Eastern used in a similar way to Western in the way you used it at the end there before.)

Australia isn't Western then, but Romania is?

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lemm.ee

That's because east-west is not based on the region, it's based on cultural aspects, along with a few other things like how people communicate. This is why Australia is western as it has a western culture. So, the whole cold war NATO thing is not 100% accurate, but defining first, second, and third world is since those are defined by political ideologies.

2

Well yes, First (Cold War era capitalists), Second (Communist, Marxist, and Maoist nations), and Third World (non-aligned and all the rest of them) are all clearly defined.

Western is more nebulous, which is why I like to push back at it. Each person's idea of "Western" tends to be a little different.

If we're taking the cultural root then Brazil, Israel and Lebanon make a nice test cases.

Edit: oh, you're making the case that Western = First World Nations. That's a fair and valid short cut, with Japan/South Korea/RoC, and various oost-Communist states in Europe.

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lemmy.world

Normal conversational speed: dubya

Enunciating: double you

Need to be unambiguous: whiskey

17

When talking about the letter of the alphabet, I say "double u"

When that letter occurs in a word, it's pronounced with pursed lips and full throated vowel sound like in "water"

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programming.dev

in english: double you in german: ve (german e, idk how to tell it to someone only knowing english)

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lemmy.world

That's something I've never understood about German or Russian. Both languages have letters that make the English w sound yet they have trouble with it? It's not like the "th" sound which doesn't exist in German so it makes no sense to me.

If you can pronounce the sound why can't you pronounce it for w's??

1

The German w sounds like the English v, while the German v sounds like the English (and German) f.

IPA of the German word "wir": /viːɐ̯/

IPA of the English word "with": /wɪθ/

I actually had to look it up, but in German the /w/ sound doesn't really exist? In some dialects the "qu" string is pronounced as /kw/ [according to Wikipedia] but in most it's pronounced as /kv/ - at least that's how I'd pronounce it and I'm mostly talking in Standard High German.

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jlai.lu

Double V (pronounced double vé, so it’s double you in English).

www is "double vé double vé double vé" in France, but often said "vévévé" in Switzerland. I believe that’s coming from the German speaking part of the country and adapted to French language.

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Funny, opposite shortening in English - "double you double you double you" often becomes "dubdubdub"

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Meldrikreply
lemmy.wtf

Same in Denmark. I think it’s only English that’s weirdly pronouncing it as “double you”, even though the letter “W” is clearly two V’s 😁

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lemmy.world

Way to complicated, just say "we" with the w from way and the e from hell like we Germans do.

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PlexSheepreply
infosec.pub

Another great example of our German efficiency! Warum zur Hölle soll das ein Doppel-V sein? Habt's ihr alle Lack gesoffen?

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lemmy.zip

In Swedish the letter w is called "dubbel v", apart from when spelling URLs, then we just say something like "ve, ve, ve, punkt, de, änn, punkt, äss, e" if we wanted to say the URL "www.dn.se".

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lemmy.world

The "äss" phonetic spelling will really help the english speakers reading it not pronounce it as "ass". Love it.

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stoyreply
lemmy.zip

Hehe, I didn't even consider that (:

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lemmy.ml

I'd probably have transcribed the letter pronunciation as 've, ve, ve, punkt, de, en, punkt, ess e'.

Just goes to show you that 'en' doesn't even follow the normal pronunciation rules of Swedish, unless we're talking about the tree, in which case it does.

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stoyreply
lemmy.zip

I thought about that but "en" is pronounced differently from "änn", and we have the word "äss" from a deck of cards.

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I had to double-check, because I've only ever used the spelling "Ess". Turns out both variants are correct.

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med
sh.itjust.works

How someone is pronouncing W is actually a good way to guess where the speaker is from, or where the person that taurht them learned english.

double you for british/american accents

dubba you for some american accents

Dablu or dabloo is a clear indication that the speaker is not a naitive western english speaker, usually indicating indian for the speaker.

double v (often pronounced as double we) usually points towards somewhere near germany/holland/belgium

I've never heard anyone say just dub, curious if anyone has?

Edit: I lied. W pronounced 'dub' is only ever used to indicate a 'win'. e.g. 'Took the dub'

8

double v (often pronounced as double we) usually points towards somewhere near germany/holland/belgium

As a Dutchie, we pronounce W as "Weigh" or "Way". No double nonsense.

3

Kansan here. It's pronounced "double-you," but my mouth tends to skip past the L so it sounds more like "dub-you" or "dub-yə"

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lemmy.ml

I'm American, fwiw. Formally I say "double you," informally I say "dub."

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lemmy.today

In Dutch we pronounce it like "way". It's much shorter than double U.

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sjmulderreply
lemmy.sdf.org

But we make up for that with griekse y, korte ei and lange ij! All pronounced [ɛi], similar to 'eye'.

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Pandareply
lemmy.today

That's true! I'm honestly not sure why we need to have both ei and ij. Must be difficult for people learning the language.

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Scribbdreply
feddit.nl

It is also for those who grew up with the language. If I have no spellcheck, I sometimes just have to write it both ways and see which way feels 'right'.

1

True, sometimes it's really simple ones, too. And sometimes I do spell it correctly but when I reread it I start to doubt myself because the word looks weird. Even though I did spell it correctly.

1

I pronounce ‘M’ but upside down.

Because we say ‘double ewe’ and ‘dooblay vee’ and I find it unconscionable that we Canadians are forced to speak based on what font we are speaking in.

5

There's also "dubyuh" that's fairly common. Hell, we had a president that pronounced it that way.

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lemm.ee

I've always wondered why it's not double v, but I say double you

4

I think it's because of how the letter is written in cursive that we call it 'double u'.

1

"Dubba-you" is my informal; "dubbya" if I'm throwing an exaggerated southern accent

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