Accented letters are text - and they have fiddly bits.By the way I think "accentuated" may be more correct than "accented" since I understand "accented" to mean that a particular vowel carries a character on top when written down to signify a particular pronunciation.
Thanks for this. Something I did not know."The standard way to pronounce Uranus among astronomers is to put the emphasis on the first syllable “ur” and then say the second part “unus”. This is the standard literary pronunciation. The more common way people have pronounced it is u-ra-nus, with the “ra” sounded like “ray”"
https://www.universetoday.com/18943/how-should-you-pronounce-uranus/
In the UK we really only started the less toilet-humour-inducing "your anus" pronunciation when it became newsworthy to talk about the planet, and news presenters were tasked with talking about there being "rings around uranus". I think the BBC probably had much to do with it, therefore. But even when I was growing up it was "your anus"."The standard way to pronounce Uranus among astronomers is to put the emphasis on the first syllable “ur” and then say the second part “unus”. This is the standard literary pronunciation. The more common way people have pronounced it is u-ra-nus, with the “ra” sounded like “ray”"
https://www.universetoday.com/18943/how-should-you-pronounce-uranus/
Of course the trouble with the more authentic pronunciation is it is urine-us.In the UK we really only started the less toilet-humour-inducing "your anus" pronunciation when it became newsworthy to talk about the planet, and news presenters were tasked with talking about there being "rings around uranus". I think the BBC probably had much to do with it, therefore. But even when I was growing up it was "your anus".
There's also the consideration that the element based on the same root name is "your an...ium". So swap "ium" for "us" and you get a consistent pronunciation of the root.
Both are acceptable pronunciations for the planet, though, and some others are finding their way in, such as "OO-ranus" (in keeping, as someone else said, with the original Greek name).
Well, if you trace the word/name back to it's roots, it does come from the same root as gave rise to "to urinate". Uranus was considered the "rain maker".Of course the trouble with the more authentic pronunciation is it is urine-us.![]()
Now that really is interesting!Well, if you trace the word/name back to it's roots, it does come from the same root as gave rise to "to urinate". Uranus was considered the "rain maker".