TechCodex to Memes@lemmy.mlEnglish • 2 years agoTechnically, she's rightprogramming.devimagemessage-square65fedilinkarrow-up1637arrow-down119
arrow-up1618arrow-down1imageTechnically, she's rightprogramming.devTechCodex to Memes@lemmy.mlEnglish • 2 years agomessage-square65fedilink
minus-square@Laticauda@lemmy.calinkfedilink24•2 years agoWait there are people who pronounce women with an i?
minus-square@Vlyn@lemmy.ziplinkfedilinkEnglish30•2 years agoYes? English is only my second language, but the way I hear it: Woman: Whoman Women: Wimin or Wimen The latter is much shorter.
minus-square@Laticauda@lemmy.calinkfedilink11•2 years agoHuh, for me it’s more like wuhmen vs wohman.
minus-square@CoggyMcFee@lemmy.worldlinkfedilink3•edit-22 years agoThe i-pronunciation is commonplace enough that some feminists who want to avoid the word “men” spell “women” as “wimmin”, i.e. the phonetic spelling.
minus-square@themusicman@lemmy.worldlinkfedilink1•1 year agoInteresting. I associate the “wimmin” spelling with Terry Pratchett’s writing, where it’s used in the speech of lower/middle-class men, implying casual/uninformed objectification.
Wait there are people who pronounce women with an i?
Yes? English is only my second language, but the way I hear it:
Woman: Whoman
Women: Wimin or Wimen
The latter is much shorter.
Huh, for me it’s more like wuhmen vs wohman.
The i-pronunciation is commonplace enough that some feminists who want to avoid the word “men” spell “women” as “wimmin”, i.e. the phonetic spelling.
Interesting. I associate the “wimmin” spelling with Terry Pratchett’s writing, where it’s used in the speech of lower/middle-class men, implying casual/uninformed objectification.