Amen James. 

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-u...@colostate.edu [mailto:owner-u...@colostate.edu] On Behalf Of 
James Frysinger
Sent: Monday, February 17, 2014 10:44 PM
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:53571] Re: No Accent on "lom" in kilometer!

Gene,

This argument seems to arise every 3 years on this mailing list. Or it has over 
the last 20 years, anyway. And it never accomplishes anything except to let 
people voice their preferences. It never accomplishes anything. That is because 
there is no "right" way or "wrong" way to pronounce "kilometer" except to those 
who write dictionaries and thus appoint themselves as experts.

I think your first statement is entirely correct.

I think your second statement is an unfounded supposition. Secondly, I think it 
flies in the face of the reality that in some languages, the unit names, when 
pronounced, would sound nothing at all like they do in English or some of the 
Romance languages, or even the Teutonic or Slavic languages. For example, the 
Greek name for what we call the "second" (of
time) is δευτερόλεπτο which transliterates to "deuterolepto". That is why the 
SI symbols are inviolate. The symbol for "second" is the same as it is for the 
δευτερόλεπτο, namely "s".

Not only are the spellings of SI units and prefixes subject to the whims of 
various languages, so also the grammar and pronunciations.

Having said that, this argument devolves down to how we should pronounce 
"kilometer" in English. We will never standardize that; people will pronounce 
it how they wish to. To-MAY-to or to-MAH-to. I, for one, will be happy as long 
as they don't pronounce it so that it sounds like "mile".

Now, let's figure out how to further metricate the US.

Jim
On 2014-02-17 12:19, mechtly, eugene a wrote:
> The CGPM does not publish an official "Guide for Pronouncing the Names and 
> Multiples of SI Units."
>
> Nevertheless, I am confident that members of the CIPM (and CGPM) would reject 
> an accent on the "lom" in the word kilometer.
>
> NBC commentators at the SUCHI Olympic events, *all* seem to have adopted this 
> bad practice of accenting the "lom."
>
> Who initiated this *deviation* from the established global practice of 
> enunciating both the prefix "kilo" and the stem "meter"?
>
> In spoken French and German there is no accented "lom" in kilometer!
>
> Is "lom" accented in any other languages which you might speak?
>
> Eugene Mechtly
>
>
>
>

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