Beebalm Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 While listening to the Teaching the Classics dvd, Mr. Andrews mentioned something being his 'apologia'. Hoping HE had it wrong (foolish thought), I ran to look it up. Yep, for years I've had it wrong. It doesn't sound like apology or apologist. Probably all you guys have it right....but I'm just sharing what I found out. :blushing: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
swellmomma Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 well you are not alone, this post made me look it up and I have been saying it wrong too, thank goodness I only needed to know how to spell it while online lol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest 4boys Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 I'm so glad you told me this. I am wanting to use Apologia's science for my boys someday and you just saved me from looking like a moron! :D Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
~Puddins~ Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 OH. ME. Ooops. Thank you for educating me :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
milovany Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 I've wondered about this too! So it's more like apple-OJE-ee-uh then?? To me it was either that or apollo-GEE-uh. Watch me be wrong on both counts, lol. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Just a Jen in Mississippi Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 Count me in among the embarrassed! I had no idea! I wonder if anyone I've said it aloud to knows this because NO one has pronounced it like "apple low gia" or corrected me!! It will take me awhile to reprogram my brain! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Beebalm Posted August 15, 2008 Author Share Posted August 15, 2008 Yes, it's like apple-OH-gee-ah. The stress is on the third syllable, not on the second and fourth. Sigh. I even taught a coop class using the wrong pronounciation. Lesson learned. When in doubt....look it up. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LizzyBee Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 But, the science textbook company by that name pronounces it the "wrong" way. So pronouncing it wrong is really right. :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
partyof5 Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 This is too funny. About a year ago I was at a book sale and was discussing Apologia books with a friend. I hadn't ever said it aloud I guess, but I went with what you all are saying is the correct pronunciation--good for me, right? Well, a woman in the aisle with us promptly corrected me in a not-so-subtle way with "We've been using Apolo-GEE-a for years" with extra emphasis on the word to be sure I got that I had said it wrong earlier. Point taken. I felt dumb but still felt the emphasis on "gee" sounded funny. So to read this conversation tonight makes me think "HEY!! I was right that day in the book store aisle!" :tongue_smilie: Who knew?! Apple-OH-gia it is! Thanks ladies! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Parrothead Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 Apple-OH-gia just doesn't even look right. I'll probably never say it correctly if I have to use it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tap Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 I think this may be a case where the public pronunciation of the product will have to remain appropriate also. I have never heard anyone call it by the correct name. So, if everyone calls it 'appolo gia' then that will have to stand as an alternate correct form. :D Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mosaicmind Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 Sounds to me like we all are sounding like a bunch of morons. At least we aren't alone :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Beebalm Posted August 15, 2008 Author Share Posted August 15, 2008 Well, it's helpful to know that my homeschooling friends weren't just kindly overlooking my goof. Like you, I've always heard it pronounced that way and assumed it might be a regional issue. When ordering, sales rep always just repeat what I say...I wouldn't correct a customer either. Oh well, I think I'll embrace the new way of saying apologia....or maybe I'll avoid it altogether like the words lay and lie. After all, I'm just a larva....there's time to figure it all out.:001_unsure: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Plaid Dad Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 In Greek, the accent is on the "i." The other pronunciation, with the accent on the second "o," comes into English via Latin. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chelle in MO Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 My sister-in-law made an interesting point one day...French is her native language and I asked her how she pronounced her newborn daughter's name. She said that when she is speaking English she pronounces it as English-speaking people would, and when speaking French she pronounces it with the appropriate sounds in French. Take the name Michelle, for example. If she was speaking to a person in English she would say, "Mu-SHELL", but in French it would be more like, "ME-shell". That makes sense to me! Chelle Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A.J. at J.A. Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 My sister-in-law made an interesting point one day...French is her native language and I asked her how she pronounced her newborn daughter's name. She said that when she is speaking English she pronounces it as English-speaking people would, and when speaking French she pronounces it with the appropriate sounds in French. Take the name Michelle, for example. If she was speaking to a person in English she would say, "Mu-SHELL", but in French it would be more like, "ME-shell". That makes sense to me! Chelle On the other hand, my german teacher in college always told me that names don't translate (maybe he meant they shouldn't translate). My SIL is from Spain so we'll be trying to pronounce my niece's names correctly. First one is easy, "Ahn-dray-a" spelled Andrea. My new niece's name is spelled "Patricia" but is pronounced "Pah-tree-thia" as they would in Spain. I like it a lot and make a point to say it properly...I'm sure they'll have to make some concessions though for their sanity since they live in the States and nobody will ever read it right here. :0) Angela Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gardenschooler Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 Oh, heck, I can't change now. Apple-OH-gia? That doesn't sound right. I'll just sound like an ignorant hick. Apollo-GEE-uh. I always suspected I wasn't pronouncing it correctly! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JFSinIL Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 My sister-in-law made an interesting point one day...French is her native language and I asked her how she pronounced her newborn daughter's name. She said that when she is speaking English she pronounces it as English-speaking people would, and when speaking French she pronounces it with the appropriate sounds in French. Take the name Michelle, for example. If she was speaking to a person in English she would say, "Mu-SHELL", but in French it would be more like, "ME-shell". That makes sense to me! Chelle But but but - isn't the French way the only way? Like in the Beatles song? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fivetails Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 I just avoid saying it. :D (and we used the astronomy this past year) ....I never knew what was right and neither way comes off my tongue happily, so I just avoid the word. ;) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A.J. at J.A. Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 I just avoid saying it. :D (and we used the astronomy this past year) ....I never knew what was right and neither way comes off my tongue happily, so I just avoid the word. ;) That definitely sounds like a plan! :D Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jackie in AR Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 But, the science textbook company by that name pronounces it the "wrong" way. So pronouncing it wrong is really right. :-) Lizzy Bee is correct. The science textbook company pronounces it apollo-GEE-uh. I was thinking I had confirmed that a few years ago, but I wasn't 100% positive. So I just called them and that is the way they answered the phone. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PrairieAir Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 So you all were putting the emPHAsis on the wrong sylLAble? I would have guessed that if the way most of you were saying it (apology-uh) was wrong that the only other possibility would have been a hard g instead of a soft g. Except now I see that everyone I've ever heard say the word loggia (which I don't think is related, just the word I thought of) is also mispronouncing it and that should also be a soft g. But wait, the dictionary says the "log" part is from the Greek "logos" which is pronounced with a hard g. :001_huh: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PrairieAir Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 I would also just like to say that it is very hard for me to say primer (as in The Prairie Primer) with a short "i". Hey, this is a construction family. We know about primers with the long "i". Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tammyla Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 :iagree: Yep. I may be off with my dialect, but I'm consistent. Add a little southern and anything sounds good.:001_smile: Lizzy Bee is correct. The science textbook company pronounces it apollo-GEE-uh. I was thinking I had confirmed that a few years ago, but I wasn't 100% positive. So I just called them and that is the way they answered the phone. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jami Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 So you all were putting the emPHAsis on the wrong sylLAble? I would have guessed that if the way most of you were saying it (apology-uh) was wrong that the only other possibility would have been a hard g instead of a soft g. Except now I see that everyone I've ever heard say the word loggia (which I don't think is related, just the word I thought of) is also mispronouncing it and that should also be a soft g. But wait, the dictionary says the "log" part is from the Greek "logos" which is pronounced with a hard g. :001_huh: It seems to me that Abbey has pointed out that it should be a hard *g* in the past. Abbey? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Colleen Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 While listening to the Teaching the Classics dvd, Mr. Andrews mentioned something being his 'apologia'. Hoping HE had it wrong (foolish thought), I ran to look it up. Yep, for years I've had it wrong. It doesn't sound like apology or apologist. Probably all you guys have it right....but I'm just sharing what I found out. :blushing: As others pointed out, you haven't had it wrong in that Apologia, the textbook company, itself pronounces the word "apollo-GEE-uh" (soft letter "g"). I could care less whether or not that's the "right" classical pronunciation. It's the name of the company, and it's the way I say the name of their products. Someone who does otherwise, imo, sounds rather hoity-toity because they are essentially making a statement that they have it "right" while the company has it "wrong". If you're using the word in another context (unrelated to the company), that's different ball o' wax. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
milovany Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 Yes and (from the song), the French also pronounce "Mabel" like "MAH bell". Hahahahahahahahahahahahaha, wink, wink, wink ... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HSMom2One Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 Oh, heck, I can't change now. Apple-OH-gia? That doesn't sound right. I'll just sound like an ignorant hick. Apollo-GEE-uh. I always suspected I wasn't pronouncing it correctly! :iagree: :iagree: :iagree: Blessings, Lucinda Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scuff Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 I would also just like to say that it is very hard for me to say primer (as in The Prairie Primer) with a short "i". Hey, this is a construction family. We know about primers with the long "i". Ditto! And I'm not from a construction family- though we're handy enough to know what primer is. :) I had a real hard time listening to the MUS demo tape with him saying "primer" with a short I. Huh? That's not right?? :001_huh: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Suzanne in ABQ Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 I agree. I heard Andrew Pudewa speak at convention two years ago, and he clearly said apollo-GEE-uh several times relating to his product. I followed him around listening, to see how he said it, because I was curious. He didn't directly address the topic of how to pronounce it, but he said apollo-GEE-uh, both from the podium, and standing around at his table. That's my story, and I'm stickin' to it! :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
milovany Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 Pudewa See, NOW the big question is how did *he* pronounce *this*? ;) Pood-wah? Pood-wuh? Poo-duh-wah? Poo-duh-wuh? Poo-day-wah? Poo-day-wuh? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
angela in ohio Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 As others pointed out, you haven't had it wrong in that Apologia, the textbook company, itself pronounces the word "apollo-GEE-uh" (soft letter "g"). I could care less whether or not that's the "right" classical pronunciation. It's the name of the company, and it's the way I say the name of their products. Someone who does otherwise, imo, sounds rather hoity-toity because they are essentially making a statement that they have it "right" while the company has it "wrong". If you're using the word in another context (unrelated to the company), that's different ball o' wax. :iagree: I like the book Carpe Diem, which has the funniest (but not rated G) passage about people who pronounce things hyper-correctly. Let's just say the author is not very complementary about them... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
angela in ohio Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 See, NOW the big question is how did *he* pronounce *this*? ;) Pood-wah? Pood-wuh? Poo-duh-wah? Poo-duh-wuh? Poo-day-wah? Poo-day-wuh? Somewhere between your first few choices... Pood-uh-wah, but the middle syllable is barely there and the last is between an ah and a uh. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Suzanne in ABQ Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 Yup. POO-duh-wah, with the accent is on the first syllable, the middle vowel is a schwa (barely there), and the last syllable starts as an "wah", then just sort of fades away. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ahwahnee Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 Try this link. You can hear it by clicking on the speaker.:tongue_smilie:http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/apologia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dragons in the flower bed Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 While listening to the Teaching the Classics dvd, Mr. Andrews mentioned something being his 'apologia'. Hoping HE had it wrong (foolish thought), I ran to look it up. Yep, for years I've had it wrong. It doesn't sound like apology or apologist. Probably all you guys have it right....but I'm just sharing what I found out. :blushing: Mr. Andrews doesn't speak everyman's English. :D No, really, he's brilliant, but my kids giggle at his pronounciation on the poetry memorization CD, and his accent helps me focus when listening to his lectures. I'm not sure what region he's from (Carolinas?) but it's certainly okay to pronounce things differently in different places. Whenever I hear it pronounced the Southern way, I think, "apple oh gee-whiz" and giggle. My northern and western apologist friends have never said that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Robin Hood Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 Yes, it's like apple-OH-gee-ah. The stress is on the third syllable, not on the second and fourth. Sigh. I even taught a coop class using the wrong pronounciation. Lesson learned. When in doubt....look it up. So it's accenting the 3 to the last vowel, as in the Latin habit? Makes sense. Now I, too, can sound educated. Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Old Dominion Heather Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 See though, I have never heard the word pronounced as ANTHING other than apple-oh-gia. So I assumed that the textbook company pronounced it that way. Seriously. I have NEVER heard anyone say that apologee-a thing! Weird. So, I am not hoity-toity, I just assume my way is how everyone says it! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fivetails Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 I would also just like to say that it is very hard for me to say primer (as in The Prairie Primer) with a short "i". Hey, this is a construction family. We know about primers with the long "i". Okay - you mean that it's NOT a long I?? I've never heard anyone say it, but anytime I saw it written, I assumed it was primer-with-a-long-i .... ! :001_huh: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pam "SFSOM" in TN Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 See though, I have never heard the word pronounced as ANTHING other than apple-oh-gia. So I assumed that the textbook company pronounced it that way. Seriously. I have NEVER heard anyone say that apologee-a thing! Weird. So, I am not hoity-toity, I just assume my way is how everyone says it! People would have to assume I'm hoity-toity, then. Or take some time to get to know me and realize I'm not. Because Uh-pol-uh-GEE-uh isn't going to come out of my mouth, no matter how much the company says it that way. :D Then again, I won't mispronounce "forte" or "err," either. And I'm certain that when I used the nominative pronoun after a linking verb in my neck of the woods, I'm considered "uppity." But that's ok with me. I'm pretty far from that, actually. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Old Dominion Heather Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 When I was about 12 or 13, I had an aunt tell me to quit talking like I thought I was better than everyone else...:confused: I wasn't trying to. That is just the way it comes out. Must be because I was home educated! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pam "SFSOM" in TN Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 When I was about 12 or 13, I had an aunt tell me to quit talking like I thought I was better than everyone else...:confused: I wasn't trying to. That is just the way it comes out. Must be because I was home educated! My mother told me that all growing-up life. What's up with that? I couldn't help it, either. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pam "SFSOM" in TN Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 :iagree: I like the book Carpe Diem, which has the funniest (but not rated G) passage about people who pronounce things hyper-correctly. Let's just say the author is not very complementary about them... It's actually almost physically painful to me to pronounce something incorrectly if I know the correct way. I have TONS of stuff I say wrong, but if I know it, I just *have* to say it right. Different strokes, I guess. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Old Dominion Heather Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 yep, me too. I can't see how people can stand to say it any other way. Wouldn't it grate on your nerves knowing that you were saying it incorrectly? See, now that I *know* this about how the textbook company pronounces their own name, it would probably drive me past the point of being able to use their materials. Yes, I know. Call me OCD. I don't deny it! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pam "SFSOM" in TN Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 yep, me too. I can't see how people can stand to say it any other way. Wouldn't it grate on your nerves knowing that you were saying it incorrectly? See, now that I *know* this about how the textbook company pronounces their own name, it would probably drive me past the point of being able to use their materials. Yes, I know. Call me OCD. I don't deny it! That's me, too, though I'm in no real danger of using the program. :D I would kinda perversely think, "If they don't know how to pronounce this word, what else don't they know?" And that's an illogical thing to think. I FREELY and fully admit that. But there you have it. It is how I think. And I do know that somewhere there is a padded room awaiting, with my name on the door. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Beebalm Posted August 15, 2008 Author Share Posted August 15, 2008 Oh, how exciting! I tried to log on this morning and my server crashed before I could read that I've been branded as pretentious and, what was the word....hoity toity.:smilielol5: Seriously, I just noticed an error in my own vocabulary and thought I'd share. I appreciate YOUR comments and don't feel the least bit defensive or angered by them. It's important to me to give my kids accurate information and they can choose whether or not to use it....just like we do. The world will keep right on spinning no matter how I pronounce a word. However, when my daughter discusses her literature study with her literary professor cousin, her math assignments with her math professor uncle, or any work with those in the education field, I want her to know the correct usage of words. Just following the crowd doesn't seem to me to be a great apologia for discerning how to use our language. If that's the case, we'll have to start leaving the t's off the end of words like didn't and wouldn't, and preface each sentence with "you know what I'm sayin?" Seize the day! BTW, thanks for the kind comments from those who were interested and looked it up. Have a great day! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
runningirl71 Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 I've been mispronouncing it too! And, I found out about it the same way you did-through the TtC's dvds! How funny! :) And, it looks like we're in good company with the length of this thread! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Beebalm Posted August 15, 2008 Author Share Posted August 15, 2008 Oh man, someone thought I was being defensive to all when I was only trying to address a couple of comments that said pronouncing it like I'd learned was pretentious. Thanks for the nice rep comment.....I was trying to be funny....sorry if it seemed I didn't notice or understand all the positives. My thanks for the positive comments were sincere, no sarcasm intended. I showed this to my daughters and they thought it was hilarious. They said they'd probably choose to each pronounce it differently just to mess with my mind. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PrairieAir Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 Okay - you mean that it's NOT a long I?? I've never heard anyone say it, but anytime I saw it written, I assumed it was primer-with-a-long-i .... ! :001_huh: Primer with a long "i" is like paint primer--something used to prime a surface. Primer with a short "i" is: "An elementary textbook for teaching children to read" or "A book that covers the basic elements of a subject." I can hardly bring myself to say it the second way out loud. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
melmac Posted August 15, 2008 Share Posted August 15, 2008 Count me in, I always thought it was ap u lowsha Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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