Sin Jin?
Maybe I'm unworldly but this is the first time I've heard "St. John" pronounced as "sin jin." Any Britishy people here care to explain why it's pronounced this way.
shareMaybe I'm unworldly but this is the first time I've heard "St. John" pronounced as "sin jin." Any Britishy people here care to explain why it's pronounced this way.
sharehere is roger moore at it in a view to a kill. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z4gPBO0CM78
shareI remember this British politician from the Thatcher era, and his name was pronounced this way too:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norman_St_John_Stevas
"Everybody in the WORLD, is bent"share
Can't help with why. It just is. You may be interested in this Wikipedia page with place names, and first and last names, that are pronounced very differently from what you might expect.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_names_in_English_with_counterintuitive_pronunciations
St John is towards the bottom of the page.
Very old British custom - the "Saint John" is slurred into the single word Sinjin.
Now explain why you Americans call a herb "an urb", which is a pure bastardisation of the French word "herb", and the English custom of dropping *some* h's from pronunciation, and replacing the prefix "a" with the grammatically correct "an", once the "h" is dropped.....
and the inability to pronounce aluminium properly. Its not a-loo-minum!
shareand the inability to pronounce aluminium properly. Its not a-loo-minum!
Like Pall Mall is pronounced Pell Mell and Pepys is pronounced Peeps.....?
sharePall Mall is pronouncd Pal Mal..not Pell Mell or Paul Maul
shareI first heard that pronunciation in "Four Weddings and a Funeral" when Rowan Atkinson pronounced it as Saint John and the guy corrected him and said Sin Jin
That was very strange to me too. Really? never heard of that.
My question now is every St John pronounced as Sin Jin or are some St John in fact St John?
Like many English rules we never know why some words are pronounced differently than they are spelled. Perhaps it was to to long and time consuming to say St John so they shortened it and it stayed on?
Ahh I remember the first time I heard St. John pronounced "sinjin" was in my English Literature class back at college in the late 1990s. I had the same reaction as many I'm sure when first encountering this name. We had been reading Jane Eyre I think it was and the character St. John Rivers was under discussion. And I was thinking, "Who the hell are they all talking about?!" It was then that I learned of the idiosyncratic pronunciation of this name in the UK.
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