How do you say cuyahoga




















Andrew Svorad Abbey on Buckeye Road for her research. Fine city, indeed. Some might say she got what she deserved. Speeding is speeding. All wet. The problems are numerous: Billing errors.

Slow response. Terrible customer service. The franchise consultant's solution to his problems? Create a Web site. Rally the troops. And fight back. His site, www. Together, we can drive them nuts, and get our bills corrected!

Disappearing jackpot:. The Ohio Lottery's Mega Millions billboards used to display the size of the jackpot. Not anymore. Don't worry, the lottery's not trying to hide anything. Nor, unfortunately, can winners simply fill in the blanks to determine their prize. The technology used to update the 38 billboards is old. They were actually giant pagers kids, ask your parents that displayed a number sent out as a page to the billboards.

They're being phased out. New billboards will be a combination of static and digital billboards, which can display the jackpot and advertise other lottery games slots, anyone?

At any rate, it was obvious that both were in use. Some folks living in Cuyahoga Falls a community north of Akron claimed one pronunciation was for the river, the other was for the town … but there seemed to be no consensus as to how the pronunciations corresponded to the two entities. I was astonished by that report; I grew up less than an hour west of Cleveland, and went to college in Ohio, and had never heard or taken in the -HOG- version; it was -HOE- all the way.

It might be prudent to pronounce it the way the new sheriff and the judge who swore him in, about does, just in case. But note the mayor of Bedford at I moved to the Cuyahoga Falls community a few years ago from Indiana , and I went through similar difficulties with pronunciation. It seems that both are correct, but from casual observation, there seems to be a difference based on social factors such as working class vs.

On campus, I mostly hear the -HOE- version. M: pronounce it the way the new sheriff and the judge Am I right that both especially the judge are talking with strong local accents? I grew up in Cuyahoga County. Both forms were used. I recall distinctly the tornado and storm warnings and other local broadcasters using the -HOG- form when the County came up. And as late as the mids, the West Side my homeland and East Side suburbs never commingled except as somebody pointed out at work. Especially in the closer south and west suburbs, there were many year-old Eastern European neighborhood enclaves that survived the onset of sprawl quite handily: all that post-War boom suburban construction was essentially settled en masse by folks fleeing the city proper.

My grandmother had no problem speaking in Slovak among the neighbors, most of whom had bought their houses new in Fairview Park the s. Does it include Ohio? I once heard someone refer to Ohio as being on the East Coast, but that was a college student newly arrived there from California. I agree that maybe -HOE- was an older pronunciation. Am I right that both especially the judge are talking with strong local accents?

Yes, I would say so. Bloomberg anchor just winging it He probably also had to sign a document to the same effect. I think that to be based out of, say, the New York office of a firm is to have that office as your home base, or base of operations.

In an ideal world, I would get this kind of information every night instead of the sports news. Come to think of it, that would be very American.

Not that I know that to be true for this guy. I know there are some dialect areas where rounded o before g occurs in some words but not others. Maybe a native can weigh in. Ooh, Great Lakes vowels! Where do I start? Hog, fog, dog, and log are all good examples.

Note that Carin, a self-professed MidAtlanticker, concurs. This leaves room for plenty of dialect and variety. And, pace Jim, folks from the Dakotas tend to speak Upper Midwestern English, which most other Americans seem to find hilarious. Maybe for you, KCinDC, but in my little world i.

Thanks, Ben! I bow to you and KC. What is the economic value of bottom-feeding fish? I met a linguist who was originally from Texas but had gone to college somewhere in the Northeast. She said she used one vowel in hog, log, frog, dog, etc, but a different one in fog , since there was no fog to speak of in Texas but plenty in the Northeast. Upper Midwestern English — how English is that? Crown: Newscaster accent is deracinated Californian crossed with where the newscaster actually comes from, and it does not function like RP.

American English is inherently polycentric in accent. Cultivated Bostonians do not aspire to speak like cultivated Houstonians, nor vice versa. I use the caught vowel for every word anybody on this thread has mentioned using it for and then some? Mississauga exactly. This shocked me at first, but then I realized that I do not voice the penultimate s in spouses or souses. View article Crain's Cleveland Business. View article WKYC3. Ex-Cuyahoga County jailer faces nearly a decade in prison for smuggling operation A former Cuyahoga County Jail corrections officer accused of a jail smuggling operation has pleaded guilty to multiple charges and now faces nearly a decade in prison.

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