That pronunciation( May-zure) and words like "bray-yud (bread) seem to originate from southwest Nebraska and western Kansas.The seen/saw thing seems to be very Nebraskan. My dad does it a lot. (He pronounces measure as MAY-zure) I have a coworker originally from Kearney and she does the seen/saw thing too. Drives me nuts
Hover-ers.
Ladies will understand. In todays world with squats, wall sits and P90x and most importantly toilet covers available in every stall there is just no reason this continues to happen.
That pronunciation( May-zure) and words like "bray-yud (bread) seem to originate from southwest Nebraska and western Kansas.
I have 3 different friends who either still live or grew up in McCook, Garden City and Colby who all pronounce "bread" as "bray yud. I'm not saying everyone from there says it that way but that the only people I've heard say it that way were from that part of Nebraska and Kansas.Where have you heard "bray-yud". That sounds more like some sling blade stuff than anything, maybe the south or Texas...
Well, I’m not very familiar with McCook but I’ve spent some (too much) time in Garden City and been through Colby often so, it’s definitely the aforementioned sling blade phenomenon :lol: There’s a different breed in west and southwest Kansas.I have 3 different friends who either still live or grew up in McCook, Garden City and Colby who all pronounce "bread" as "bray yud. I'm not saying everyone from there says it that way but that the only people I've heard say it that way were from that part of Nebraska and Kansas.
FIFY :lol:This week’s renewed pet peeve: people who leave faucets running. How effing hard is it to turn off the effing faucet after you’re done effing washing your effing hands?