View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Facts] Re: Theary...?
No idea, since she's a she ... what about Thierry? Could have been a name her parents heard, liked and spelt their way ... I know a woman who got named Jerice for that reason.
vote up1vote down

Replies

Isn't Thierry pronounced somewhere between "Teary" and "Terry"? I was under the impression that the 'Th' was pronounced as a hard T, in which case it wouldn't make sense for it to be spelled Theary if it was overheard.
ChrisellAll we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us. - J.R.R. Tolkien.

vote up1vote down
I was thinking more of the spelling, as most languages don't have a sound like the English -th-, and when they do, it gets represented by different letters. Do you know about Vietnamese sounds, Chrisell? They certainly have -th- appearing in their spelling system, but I don't know how they pronounce it (plus, they were a French colony for a while and it's a sound that gives the French enormous difficulty). And indigenous South African languages can be very confusing because they have a voiced and an unvoiced t, represented as t and th but not pronounced like the English th - so Thabo Mbeki's first name sounds like TAH-boh.It'd also be helpful to know where the labelled lady originated from!
vote up1vote down
Where does SA get it's name?
vote up1vote down
Chrisell is right. I have a nephew Thierry, born and raised in France.And that's how he says it.
vote up1vote down
Thierry is pronounced Tee-airy.
vote up1vote down