So how is that pronounced, then? To rhyme with "tug"? (That would be interesting.) Or is it simply "tuh"? Rather than rhyming with "zoo," which would be the "received pronunciation" I guess.The trend at present seems to be to render all public announcements on the rail network in local dialect . For example In Lancashire you don`t go from Manchester to Liverpool but "t`ugh" Liverpool.
I despair 🙂
Now show us one for Voigtländer 🙂You are right. The Wikipedia page has an audio sample pronounced as “Knee-Con”.
Or, for those who like rebus puzzles and the American board game and game show - Concentration:
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😁
www.pronouncekiwi.com
There's two variants. The classic Northern utterance is more like "tut"; it's usually formed from a contraction of "to the"; "going to the pub" becomes "goin' tut pub", with all the Us being low and quite guttural.So how is that pronounced, then? To rhyme with "tug"? (That would be interesting.) Or is it simply "tuh"? Rather than rhyming with "zoo," which would be the "received pronunciation" I guess.
The short i the Brits use is just as wrong, really. The first syllable in Nippon is "knee". But in any case, as a native English speaker and second language Japanese speaker, neither English nor Japanese speakers have a monopoly on pronouncing loanwords from the other language "wrong".Anyway, all this aside... I'm still going to have to put my foot down and say the American pronunciation of "Nye-khon" is wrong. After all, Nikon is derived from Nippon Kogaku, and you don't pronounce Nippon as Nye-pon, do you?
When I started digital photography, I ran into everything like this.Yeah, but If you do then the sd card is full or dies or you run out of film.
Life happens. If you take it too seriously, as some do, it'll bite you in the ass.
Hopefully by sunrise when my shift ends, the rain will have stopped. If so, I'll see if I can find a picture or three. If not, there'll be tomorrow or the next day.
When I started digital photography, I ran into everything like this.
One night I was out and thought what a good photo something would be, but I had left the camera at home. After that, I took the camera out every day.
Soon after, I tried to turn on the camera but found the battery was dead. The solution was to always charge the battery before going out.
Then I tried taking a photo, only to find that I had left the battery charging at home. So I bought a spare battery and carried that everywhere, too.
Memory card was next. The solution was a spare memory card.
Now my bag always has at least one spare card, spare battery, and another camera, just in case something goes wrong somewhere. And if I (heaven forbid) lost my bag, there's always the camera in my pocket. 😆
When I forget my wife’s name I just call her honey.
It's fun and sometimes perplexing how social groups continue to develop eddies of linguistic uniqueness,Also Canadians. To most of us, even those like me who've lived in Australia for half a century, the locals still talk a mysterious dialect. They have many amusing expressions, but out of the cities, a lot of what I hear is like alien talk to me.
And that's why I prefer digital cameras that take AA's. I do contract work for insurance company and I use a Fuji zoom camera for that because it uses AA's I can buy anyplace and it's 24 to 500mm equalivent lens.My pet peeve is the lack of standardized batteries. It seems like every digital camera has a specific size and associated charger. I’ve got a stack of the things from Nikon and Fuji. Will obsolete batteries put cameras out of commission after they’re no longer available?
Another peeve is the overuse of AAA cells in devices. They’re pricey and have less capacity than AA size. A small increase in device size would not be a problem for me.
And don’t get me going on all the different memory card formats, ah the price of progress….. 😵