originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Wait... I say "brusketta" but "marasheeno."
originally posted by MarkS:
Linguists out thereLet us start the new year on an academic footing.
Why is "Koch Brothers" pronounced like "Coke" whereas the former hizzoner Koch is pronounced as "Kotch"?
...Just FTR, how many pronunciations of your last name have you heard, Mark?
Amarena and marasca cherries are different cultivars.originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Wait... I say "brusketta" but "marasheeno."
'Course it is mar-ah-skee-no. Interestingly Italians use the term for the distillate of sour cherries, not the cherries themselves (which are generally referred to as amarene)
originally posted by Cole Kendall:
It took me a while to fully get comfortable with pistakio.
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Amarena and marasca cherries are different cultivars.)originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Wait... I say "brusketta" but "marasheeno."
'Course it is mar-ah-skee-no. Interestingly Italians use the term for the distillate of sour cherries, not the cherries themselves (which are generally referred to as amarene)
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Amarena is also a variety; it grows in different places than Marasca.
Amarene is an Italian word. It looks like the plural of Amarena but if you say otherwise, that's fine by me.
That one really amazed me when i first encountered it. Being 22, I thought i was having my gullibility tested.originally posted by Cole Kendall:
My [least] favorite such example is "Goethe" Street in Chicago (3 syllables in the local patois).