Auto-correct is faxing infuriating.
;-)
Auto-correct is faxing infuriating.
Reminds me of a funny incident at the LGS in South Carolina 29 years ago. The shop is a pawnshop, but often had many interesting guns. The owner was a gun guy.Not really a mispronunciation but I was rather too old to have it pointed out to me that there was a double meaning to “Mannlicher”….
SockoIs Sako pronounced Socko or Sayko?
Good luck getting a Garand for a grand, lolGrand vs Garand
If I remember right, my grandfather said carbine with a long "i." My dad, who was a Marine in Korea and was issued an M1 Carbine always said "car-bean" with a long "e" sound. Dictionary says both are correct, so I guess it's users choice. I say "car bean" like my dad did.Is it M1 Carbine or M1 Carbeen?
I've tried to convince guys to say it "Loo - pold" Most of them have said " Lee - a - pold" for so long they just can't.Leupold is pronounced loo-pold, not Lee-o-pold. They actually used to put this in their catalog, but I think they’ve finally given up.
I asked a few Czech fellows about that once they said “Bruno”I can't believe I forgot about "Bruno".![]()
I’m not 100% sure, but I think it’s not “Loopold” either, that would be the Americanised (simplified) way of saying it.Leupold is pronounced loo-pold, not Lee-o-pold. They actually used to put this in their catalog, but I think they’ve finally given up.
You could be right, but I’m just going by what they used to print in their catalogs. I guess they probably get to decide their own pronunciation.I’m not 100% sure, but I think it’s not “Loopold” either, that would be the Americanised (simplified) way of saying it.
Isn’t it more something like “Ljewpold” ? This is a German origin name, and “Leu” is more something like “Ljew” or starting with an “l” sound, then soft “j” sound to finish in “ew” like in “ewe”