ChatterBank0 min ago
Titanium
40 Answers
Would you pronounce its first syllable as in 'titanic', or as in 'titter' ?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I've always said TIT anium- although it only occasionaly comes up in Science lessons. The first time I heard the Tie-tanium version was when the David Guetta/Sia song came out 5 or so years ago, and I assumed it was an American pronunciation. Maybe I've been saying it wrong all these years.
I've just found out I've been mispronouncing the name of a rapper- Stefflon Don. I assumed it was Stefflon to rhyme with Teflon followed by Don (as in Don Mclean). But just heard on the radio it is pronounced Steff + London.
I've just found out I've been mispronouncing the name of a rapper- Stefflon Don. I assumed it was Stefflon to rhyme with Teflon followed by Don (as in Don Mclean). But just heard on the radio it is pronounced Steff + London.
Hmmm. having difficulty giving a best answer. :o)
I think the lady in the sound-clip and jim might be right, and because of its strength, I would associate it more poetically with a Titan; "(Gk Mth.) member of a gigantic race; person of superhuman size, intellect, strength etc." - rather than a diminutive bird.
I think the lady in the sound-clip and jim might be right, and because of its strength, I would associate it more poetically with a Titan; "(Gk Mth.) member of a gigantic race; person of superhuman size, intellect, strength etc." - rather than a diminutive bird.
That's cool and all Mikey, although on the face of it v-e's answer suggests that "titan" sounds far more like "tittan" (or even "tee-tan"?) than "tyetan" when read from the original Greek.
I would guess that's where the apparently "traditional English" pronunciation of titanium as in "titter" comes from, but for reasons I'm not aware of myself the "tit" combination rhymes with "tight" more often than not nowadays.
I would guess that's where the apparently "traditional English" pronunciation of titanium as in "titter" comes from, but for reasons I'm not aware of myself the "tit" combination rhymes with "tight" more often than not nowadays.
Oh, absolutely, I agree with that. I'm just saying that trying to insist that "Titanium is named after the Titans so should rhyme with Titan" is all well and good until you start to realise that the pronunciation of "titan" is also up for debate -- at least, in the sense that historically it was pronounced differently from how it is today.