Apparently ukulele is 2 words uku and lele meaning jumping flea. Although I usually say yuke (uke) a lot of people say ookoo (uku). You say potayto I say potaato...Just like I call the brand of ukes I have Kaalaa (Kala) but I saw a video of Mike talking about his company and he says Cawlaa.
I've learned that the safest thing to do is just not pronounce it at all, abbreviated or not.
Sure, in print I'll type "ukulele" or "uke" all day long. But in person and on videos, I just stick with "that", "it", "my instrument", "ol' Bessie", and such.
In worst-case scenarios, I'll fake a cellphone call, appendicitis attack, or Elvis sighting just to avoid having to actually say the word.
JJ
Boy, that last topic turned into a fight. Why does this kind of discussion turn heated?Hoo boy, here we go again (see previous threads listed below) . . . 1) ukulele is one word made from two hawaiian words 2) uku translates to flea or head lice, you can't play either of em 3)From the Kala website; KALA (pronounced Kah’ la). 'Nuff said on this topic.
http://www.ukuleleunderground.com/forum/showthread.php?25126-Weird-question-about-grammar
http://www.ukuleleunderground.com/forum/showthread.php?12021-you-kulele-vs-oo-kulele
http://www.ukuleleunderground.com/forum/showthread.php?4501-Ukulele-Pronunciation
http://ukuleleunderground.com/forum/showthread.php?982-How-do-YOU-pronounce-ukulele
Yes, but people still say "zee-brah" when it's obvious to anyone with English as their first language it's really pronounced "zeh-bra" ... you can't stop people from mispronouncing words. Let them call it ook or yuke - we all know what they mean.Ever notice that no one actually says "po-tah-to"? A bit OT I know, but still, it eats away at me like a festering wound...
I'm sure we'd be having that debate if zebras were as popular as ukuleles and there was a forum called Zebra Underground.Yes, but people still say "zee-brah" when it's obvious to anyone with English as their first language it's really pronounced "zeh-bra" ... you can't stop people from mispronouncing words. Let them call it ook or yuke - we all know what they mean.
Yes, but people still say "zee-brah" when it's obvious to anyone with English as their first language it's really pronounced "zeh-bra"
I've learned that the safest thing to do is just not pronounce it at all, abbreviated or not.
Sure, in print I'll type "ukulele" or "uke" all day long. But in person and on videos, I just stick with "that", "it", "my instrument", "ol' Bessie", and such.
In worst-case scenarios, I'll fake a cellphone call, appendicitis attack, or Elvis sighting just to avoid having to actually say the word.
JJ