I do the same thing with reading- never bother trying to figure out the
pronunciation of names.  I think that only works when there are few words
that you "brain-mumble" over (I like that).  In reading Lord of the Rings,
the first ~30 pages were pretty rough because of all the necessary mumbling.
Two friends who are a couple read to each other the Harry Potter series
which got a number of us in a debate about how to pronounce Hermione (yes,
this was 5-7 26-30 year old PhDs reading Harry Potter last summer- summers
are slow in St. Louis :).   For what it was worth, it was the Scottish man
who had it right (Her-MY-o-nee, right?).

Patrick (who is just waiting for the papers to be turned in on Monday...)


************************
Patrick O. Dolan
Department of Psychology
Drew University
Madison, NJ  07940
973-408-3558
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
************************

----- Original Message -----
From: "Maxwell Gwynn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, December 14, 2001 3:41 PM
Subject: Re: Blooper Season/Mispronounciations


>
> I'm probably not alone in the Hermione (Her-me-OWN / Her-MY-o-nee)
> mispronounciation.
>
> In fact, when I had the time to read more novels than I do now (Harry
> Potter aside ~8-) ), I'd sometimes realize after finishing a book that I
> never really tried to figure out how to pronounce some characters' names.
> I'd just engage in a bit of brain-mumbling whenever I came across that
> name.  I'd only realize this when I later spoke to someone about the
> character.
>
> Hmmm, I wonder if there is a phonetic/whole-word-reading equivalence here?
>
> -Max
>



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