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Slaugham - how is it pronounced?







A place that is close to my heart (In Nottinghamshire, not in Sussex) ...

Basford - pronounced Baseford.

My ancestors came from Leicestershire. We can't agree on how our surname is spelt, but we all agree it should be pronounced differently from the place in Nottingham.
 


edna krabappel

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 7, 2003
47,225
I suppose it's a little unfair to expect someone who doesn't live locally to be an expert on place name pronunciation.

I'll take a punt that plenty of NSCers couldn't nail the pronunciation of all of this lot without Googling them first.

Belvoir (Leics)
Mousehole (Cornwall I think)
Woolfardisworthy (Devon)
Alnwick (Northumberland)
Cholmondeston and Cholmondley (Cheshire)
Frome (Somerset)
Fowey (Cornwall)
Gillingham (Dorset)
Happisburgh (Norfolk)
Hawick (Scottish Borders somewhere)
Kirkcudbright (Scotland)
Great Barugh (Yorkshire)
Wymondham (Norfolk)
Prinknash (Gloucestershire)
 


generation x

its in the blood
Nov 24, 2007
389
A place that is close to my heart (In Nottinghamshire, not in Sussex) ...

Basford - pronounced Baseford.

My ancestors came from Leicestershire. We can't agree on how our surname is spelt, but we all agree it should be pronounced differently from the place in Nottingham.

Mrs X is from here & she pronounces it Baysefud.
 
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perseus

Broad Blue & White stripe
Jul 5, 2003
23,458
Sūþseaxna
Second "h" is silent in Sussex usually ??? Sloffam (not Sloe'am), Shoram (for Shoreham) etc. Don't tell foreigners though.
 
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the wanderbus

Well-known member
Dec 7, 2004
2,944
pogle's wood
Second "h" is silent in Sussex usually ??? Sloffam (not Sloe'am), Shoram (for Shoreham) etc. Don't tell foreigners though.

Is Withyham an exception to the rule, surely it should be Withyam?
 


Nah. It might be Shore'um, but it's Withy-Ham and Etching-Ham (as in the American pronunciation of Birmingham, Alabama).

A related pronunciation, with the emphasis on the final syllable, is, of course, SeaFORD (as opposed to Seaf'd)
 










perseus

Broad Blue & White stripe
Jul 5, 2003
23,458
Sūþseaxna
Is Withyham an exception to the rule, surely it should be Withyam?

It is NOT a rule. It is a habitual natural way of pronunciation by local people. Shoram not Shorum. I don't know about other -hams. Large -hams are only indicative. I am not sure if the "h" is silent in Littlehampton.

Shoreham was also spelt Shoram.
 






perseus

Broad Blue & White stripe
Jul 5, 2003
23,458
Sūþseaxna
Moving on ... How do people pronounce Moulsecoomb?

MOLE or MOOL? SCOOM or SCUM?

I'm ignoring the other question ... how do you SPELL Moulsecoomb?

Hold on, the separation is wrong!? Moles and coombe. Coombes is pronounced coomes.
 


GoldWithFalmer

Seaweed! Seaweed!
Apr 24, 2011
12,687
SouthCoast
Moving on ... How do people pronounce Moulsecoomb?

MOLE or MOOL? SCOOM or SCUM?

I'm ignoring the other question ... how do you SPELL Moulsecoomb?

Mole-scoom..........BE!!
 










Gwylan

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
31,365
Uffern
I suppose it's a little unfair to expect someone who doesn't live locally to be an expert on place name pronunciation.

I'll take a punt that plenty of NSCers couldn't nail the pronunciation of all of this lot without Googling them first.

Belvoir (Leics)
Mousehole (Cornwall I think)
Woolfardisworthy (Devon)
Alnwick (Northumberland)
Cholmondeston and Cholmondley (Cheshire)
Frome (Somerset)
Fowey (Cornwall)
Gillingham (Dorset)
Happisburgh (Norfolk)
Hawick (Scottish Borders somewhere)
Kirkcudbright (Scotland)
Great Barugh (Yorkshire)
Wymondham (Norfolk)
Prinknash (Gloucestershire)

I know about half of those - some great names there

Moving on ... How do people pronounce Moulsecoomb?

MOLE or MOOL? SCOOM or SCUM?

I'm ignoring the other question ... how do you SPELL Moulsecoomb?

I pronounce it MOLL SCOOM - and I was brought up there (it's how people around me pronounced it)
 




Barrel of Fun

Abort, retry, fail
I was wandering in Oxford with a friend and we past an advert for the Glyndebourne Touring Opera. He said "Where on earth is Glin-dee-born"?

Bicester perplexed me for a little while. I assumed Biss-ter and Bye-sester were different places.
 


West Hoathly Seagull

Honorary Ruffian
Aug 26, 2003
3,540
Sharpthorne/SW11
Can we have the Hoathly debate?

East Hoathlee and West Hoathlye, I'm given to understand.

Correct, though plenty of locals manage to get it wrong. Arding-lye, or Arding-lee? The former is correct, though not all of those who get it wrong are from far away. And many locals emphasise the ly(e) bit at the end.
 


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