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Author Topic:  How do you pronounce "Teisco" and "Guyatone"?
Charlie McDonald


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Post  Posted 9 Apr 2017 5:35 am    
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Oui. Pretty goyish.
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Doug Beaumier


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Post  Posted 9 Apr 2017 5:41 am    
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Quote:
So you're saying there is no person named "Jay Turser", it's just a fictitious corporate name?


That's been going on for years. For example, there was no Betty Crocker. That's a fictitious character dreamed up by an ad agency.
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Jim Cohen


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Post  Posted 9 Apr 2017 5:42 am    
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Doug Beaumier wrote:
Quote:
So you're saying there is no person named "Jay Turser", it's just a fictitious corporate name?


That's been going on for years. For example, there was no Betty Crocker. That's a fictitious character dreamed up by an ad agency.


This I can handle. Just don't tell me anything about Aunt Jemima...
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Doug Beaumier


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Post  Posted 9 Apr 2017 5:50 am    
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Jim, you read my mind! Yes, Aunt Jemima is fake too. That one really breaks my heart.
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Charlie McDonald


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Post  Posted 9 Apr 2017 5:59 am    
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I grew up with reality syndrome.
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Terry Barnett

 

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Post  Posted 10 Apr 2017 4:09 am    
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Hey Doug...where I come from your name would be pronounced Bo-me-eh, eh. Could be worse...Sean Bean always gets me going.
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Doug Beaumier


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Post  Posted 10 Apr 2017 6:36 am    
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Yeah, that makes sense. There are a lot of Beaumiers in Canada. My family roots go back to Quebec, several generations ago. Maybe that's why I say GOY a Tone! Cool
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Larry Carlson


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Post  Posted 10 Apr 2017 6:52 am    
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I call them 'guitars'.
Gi-tahrs............
But it's probably Gu-tahrs so that's wrong too.
I'm lonely, can you tell?..... Rolling Eyes
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Doug Beaumier


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Post  Posted 10 Apr 2017 7:11 am    
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Is that GEE' tars or Guh TARS' ...?
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Steve Pawlak

 

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Arizona, USA
Post  Posted 10 Apr 2017 7:19 am    
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I always called them junk
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Rick Barnhart


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Arizona, USA
Post  Posted 10 Apr 2017 9:07 am    
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I was surprised to hear the correct pronunciation of "Bakelite." I always assumed it was simply pronuonced like the common words, bake & light.
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Doug Beaumier


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Northampton, MA
Post  Posted 10 Apr 2017 11:07 am    
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Me too, Rick. I still can't say Bake uh lite, after so many years of saying Bake lite. Old habits are hard to break. Surprised Same thing with Goy' a tone and Tee' sko
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Jim Newberry


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Seattle, Upper Left America
Post  Posted 10 Apr 2017 11:22 am    
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I told a Japanese friend that I'd restored a "Tie Sko" amp and he looked very puzzled. Then he said: In Japan, we say "Tess Ko". So that's my reference. As far as them Gill-O-Teens... I don't know...
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George Piburn


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Post  Posted 10 Apr 2017 11:29 am     Coffee ?
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No Juan Valdez or Mrs. Olsen either. The Last Drop is the Issue.
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Charlie McDonald


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Post  Posted 10 Apr 2017 11:42 am    
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Jim Newberry wrote:
In Japan, we say "Tess Ko".

I'll buy that. Tess Ko matches
David M Brown wrote:
Te - Su - Ko
to me. Seems Japanese pronunciations have an extra syllable attached to 's's.' and Teisco would be a phonetic abbreviation.

So much for a global theory on dipthongs.
I wonder how many Asian guitar names we pronounce wrong, like Alvarez. Or Tulsa.
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Larry Carlson


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Post  Posted 10 Apr 2017 1:28 pm    
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Charlie McDonald wrote:

So much for a global theory on dipthongs.


Well.......I've been called worse...... Rolling Eyes
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Doug Beaumier


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Post  Posted 10 Apr 2017 4:10 pm    
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Jim Newberry wrote:
In Japan, we say "Tess Ko".


I like that!
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Paul Honeycutt

 

From:
Colorado, USA
Post  Posted 15 Apr 2017 8:07 pm    
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When I worked at a music store in Tucson, the Mexican guys would ask for "Eye-bon-yez" guitars.

I'm going to stick with what I've used all these years. Why should I let the facts get in the way of a good story?
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Peter Lindelauf

 

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Penticton, BC
Post  Posted 18 Apr 2017 11:21 am    
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My son is fluent in Japanese, Doug, and advises teh-su-ko or as above a truncated tess-ko ['teh' E as in 'ten']and goo-ya-tone is what a JAPANESE person would say. No real stresses on the syllables. In related news, it's tah-kah-mee-nay for the guitars. Not tacka-mine. The first two instrument names have no particular meaning -- just anglicized syllables -- but Takamine means "high mountain." Partial to their guitars so thought I'd slip that in.
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Last edited by Peter Lindelauf on 18 Apr 2017 1:23 pm; edited 2 times in total
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Doug Beaumier


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Northampton, MA
Post  Posted 18 Apr 2017 11:42 am    
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That's good info, Peter. It makes me rethink all of this. I'm wondering now if English speaking people should try to say foreign words in their original language or "anglicize" the words.
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Peter Lindelauf

 

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Penticton, BC
Post  Posted 18 Apr 2017 1:03 pm    
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I don't think too many Americans worry about that, Doug. No disrespect here. My wife is Californian. And the ex. But I do laugh when I hear something like 'knitch' instead of 'neesh' for the French word 'niche'. Another Americanism that cracks me up is going from the French boo-tahn-ee-ay to boot-in-ear -- as in a lapel boo-kay being a bucket. Foy-ay to foy-er. ("There's a far [fire] in the foyer" would get you an "eh?" in Canada.)

Much of the English world refers to the artist, Van Gogh, as Vin-sint (easy enough) Van Go. Being of Dutch descent, trust me, it's more like fan-sahn fan hoch (gutteral -ch like hawk). So, often it's a question of wanting to sound sophisticated while coming off as a rube. Ha. Not to mention regional dialects across Canada or the US.

All the same, about half the time I say Weissenborn and the other half, Vise-in-born. Still good to make an effort -- as you have -- to say it 'right' or as a native speaker would. Leads to interesting linguistic discussions...
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Charlie McDonald


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Post  Posted 19 Apr 2017 4:55 am    
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"Ah, Bach."--Radar O'Reilly.

Very interesting. All of a sudden, Gu-ya-tone looks right.

Who knows, they could have been going for Goya.

Tho not a steel (altho why not?) here's my favorite Teisco, the Del Rey, another possible attempt at Spanish.

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David M Brown


From:
California, USA
Post  Posted 19 Apr 2017 1:16 pm    
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Peter Lindelauf wrote:
My son is fluent in Japanese, Doug, and advises teh-su-ko or as above a truncated tess-ko ['teh' E as in 'ten']and goo-ya-tone is what a JAPANESE person would say. No real stresses on the syllables. .


Exactly!

It's not a trick - nor a guess. This is how the Japanese write it phonetically.

Teisco (テスコ)

The three kana characters are:

" teh-su-ko or as above a truncated tess-ko "

"su" is often devoiced and thus "tess-ko"
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