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sarchar ,

Ga-ma-la

BilboBargains ,

Car-mullah

MerchantsOfMisery ,

“Kahm-lah”.

Taalnazi ,

I say it as [ˈka.ma.la].

NegativeLookBehind , (edited )
@NegativeLookBehind@lemmy.world avatar

Cum Allah

Edit: Jeez, I was just trying to help pronounce it

crimsonpoodle ,

Careful that’s how we got the floods that one time…

cornshark ,

“Kamala”

emergencyfood ,

The Indian (Sanskrit) name is pronounced ka-ma-laa (meaning lotus), with no stress, and no gap in between the syllables. The first two 'a’s are pronounced like the ‘u’ in rum, while the last is the same sound but longer (so like the ‘a’ in calm).

The US Presidential candidate’s name is pronounced the way she likes, which in this case is closer to ko-ma-laa.

funkless_eck ,

Every word has stress. You probably mean the first phoneme is stressed. And the “rum” sound you’re looking for is called the “schwa”

emergencyfood ,

Every word has stress.

In most Indian languages, most words are unstressed. There is a distinction between long and short syllables, but that comes from vowel length, not stress. A few words (like him-AA-la-ya) do have stress, but this is the exception and usually happens due to conjugation.

You probably mean the first phoneme is stressed.

No, kamala is unstressed.

And the “rum” sound you’re looking for is called the “schwa”

Yes.

Paraneoptera ,

Not in classical Sanskrit. Vedic Sanskrit had pitch accent, which had been lost by the classical Sanskrit era. English has stress accent. But many languages do not have stress accent, and either have pitch accent or syllables are not accented at all.

Nemoder ,

I think it’s pronounced “Madam President”

404 ,

So say we all.

solarvector ,

Was wondering earlier, why not just President? Why add the “madam”?

thesporkeffect ,

As opposed to “Mr President” which seems common enough

Nemoder ,

It’s just a slightly more formal sounding title. This answer on stackexchange goes through some of the history on why alternatives aren’t used.

razorwiregoatlick ,
@razorwiregoatlick@lemmy.world avatar

Comma-la

RandomVideos ,

I pronounce it like the toki pona word “kalama

No, i do not swap “la” and “ma”

velox_vulnus ,

Actually, this is the right pronounciation, but obviously, with the words swapped.

todd_bonzalez ,

ML making fun of a Black woman’s name. I wish I was surprised, but I’m not.

reddit_sux ,

That’s an Indian name

rickyrigatoni ,

What are you talking about? Nobody here is making fun of her name.

FrostyTheDoo ,

I think it’s an honest question, which is a respectful thing to ask if you don’t know. I myself haven’t been sure, because I’ve heard it pronounced multiple different ways even by news pundits.

razorwiregoatlick ,
@razorwiregoatlick@lemmy.world avatar

No one is making fun. It’s not a common name and people want to make sure that pronounce it correctly.

ieatpwns ,

,-la

NickwithaC ,
@NickwithaC@lemmy.world avatar

Rhymes with Pamela.

DavidDoesLemmy ,
@DavidDoesLemmy@aussie.zone avatar

Karma-la… But drop the ‘r’

obinice ,
@obinice@lemmy.world avatar

Why would you think it can only be pronounced with an “uh” at the end? Where did that come from?

I could be wrong about how she uses her name of course, but I would pronounce it Cam-ahl-a, nothing the hard a at the end, as in apple.

We don’t say uhpple, we say apple.

DirigibleProtein OP ,

Why would you think it can only be pronounced with an “uh” at the end? Where did that come from?

I can’t think of any words that end in the hard a (but I’m willing to learn, hence this post).

But words that end in the letter a with the “uh” sound seem to be common:

China Koala Academia Pizza Cicada

idiomaddict ,

Huzzah does (as do similar words like hurrah), but it’s hard to find a non-stressed version, except for maybe chutzpah

Ashelyn ,

I don’t think it would be correct to use the A in apple for any of the As in Kamala. It’s more of the A with an open mouth than constrained to the front. The A in calm is much closer imo

I should really be using the IPA to make my point here but I don’t know all the letters

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