View Message

[Opinions] Why do you pronounce Sara and Sarah differently?
Just wondering. I heard some people were pronouncing them differently and it doesn't make sense to me at all. I mean you don't pronounce Nora and Norah differently either or Susanna and Susannah etcHere in Germany Sara and Sarah are both pronounced SAH-ra and Hanna and Hannah are both HUN-na and when I pronounce them in English they are both SEH-ra and HAN-na.
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

I don't, and I find it strange that some people say they do. I've known several Sarahs and several Saras, and they were pronounced the same.
vote up1
i think it's just an accent thing.
vote up1
I pronounce Sara and Sarah exactly the same way, and exactly the way you do in English. :-)
vote up1
It depends on which language you're using. In some, the vowels are always pronounced the same, such as in Spanish. In English especially, we have 11 vowel sounds and 3 dipthongs (blended vowel sounds). The sound used depends on if the syllable is stressed or not.
vote up1
I know butwhy is Cara CARE-ah but Sara SAH-ra? or does it all depend on the accent?
vote up1
Well, it's notUsually if you pronounce Sara as Sah-rah, you also prn. Cara and Tara and Zara this way too, as we do here in Aus and also in the UK. It seems to only be an American (and Canadian? how do you pronounce these names in Canada? Any other countries say them this way?) thing to say them as Care-, Sare-, Tare- and Zare-uh. Oh and Clara too. The Clair-uh prn. seems very odd to me, but I've heard quite a few people in the US prn. it this way. Also, in Australia Haley, Halley would be pronounced Hah-lee, not Hayley as it seems to get in the US.I'm pretty sure it's just a regional thing. Ella has a Sara at her school, prn. same as Sarah, but Sara's mum is American.
vote up1
Yes, exactly.
vote up1
I agree with this. Tara, Zara, Cara and Sara are all pronounced in the same pattern in Croatia also, while Sarah gets the English pr.
vote up1
I say Sara as SAIR-uh, but I've heard SA-ruh and SAH-ruh a good amount. SAIR-uh is the most common prn though.And Cara isn't always CARE-uh. It's my middle name and I say CA-ruh (CA as in cat), but I know a CARE-uh and I've heard CAH-ruh.
vote up1
In Spanish, it's SA-ra, so if they know the person is Hispanic, they might say SA-ra, although I usually say SAIR-uh.
vote up1
From what I've heard, it's always SARE-uh in America.
vote up1
I pronounce them the same
vote up1
Here inn Czech Republic and Slovakia Sara is pronounced SAH-ra (Sara). Sarah pronounced SAH-RAH - the H in the end sounds like ch (viz Bach).
Hana is pronounced HAH-na.
vote up1
nt
vote up1
Because different countries have different accents and phonetic rulesI'm from the middle of the U.S. and I pronounce Sara and Sarah exactly the same, but they are both SAIR-uh. Norah/Nora and Susannah/Susanna are a different case, because the rules really only apply when you have the letter set "ara" in a name (Tara, Cara, etc).Oh, I pronounce Hanna and Hannah as HAN-uh, though Hana is HAH-nuh.
vote up1
I agree with all of that
vote up1
In the UK, generally, they are pronounced:Sara = 'SAR-uh' (like Zara)
Sarah = 'SAIR-uh'
vote up1