All through school I was taught to pronounce the alphabet ‘Z’ as ‘zed’. Then one fine day this TV Channel came up with the name ZTV. I would call it Z (zed) TV until I realized it was supposed to be called Zee TV. I wondered why. I ignored the implication. For me a ‘Z’ was a zed. Finally, when I found everybody calling it Zee TV, I had to follow suit.
I was always proud of my English (the proper British English that was taught in our Schools). When speaking to some foreigners on the phone during my early years at work, I felt a bit embarrassed if I pronounced a ‘0’ as zero and the person at the other end repeated it as ‘O’ as in ‘oh’. Since then I have come a long way. Now I proudly (or call it stubbornly) repeat ‘zero’ if I hear an ‘O’. I am an Indian and we pronounce it so here; and the foreigners better learn to live with it if they want to interact with us.
I also learnt to pronounce ‘Envelope’ as en-vel-ope at school, but I managed to twist it to be pronounced as ‘Auhnvelope’ because my friend pronounced it so and it sounded so polished. Somehow that pronunciation has stuck to me. I would be uncomfortably saying it any other way. Thankfully I didn’t pick up the pronunciation ‘Collaage’ in place of ‘College’ when I joined college; and I am glad for it.
‘Anyway’ has since become ‘Anyways’ and very generously dropped even in the typical Hindi TV serials; and I refuse to accept that.
I continued stubbornly to pronounce ‘Z’ as zed. Zee was for the Americans and I had never been a follower of American English. But now I am serious in doubt whether I am right, whether I am ignoring the fact that India is changing. Somehow Zed has actually become Zee. The Chinese have arrived too and even they call it Zee. I found my colleagues dropping the word Zee. I tried to ignore it as I thought they were interacting with Americans and trying to show off. But when I saw a Business channel repeating Zee, I seriously wondered what world I had been living in all these years. Had I had a loss of memory? Why couldn’t I recall the word ‘Zee’ being used in the past? Or maybe my school was outdated and we were not taught what everyone was being taught. I badly miss my school friends. Atleast I could have compared notes with them. Maybe I am just growing old.
Coming back to the ‘Z’. That is not the only trouble it gave me. Computerisation has further got me confused. Where earlier I would be confident of where to use an ‘S’ and where to use a ‘Z’, now I am not so sure. Initially, when the computer would automatically change my ‘S’ to ‘Z’, I would go back and change it manually. But over a period of time, I have started being submissive to the computer and accept its authority as final. In fact, now when in doubt over a spelling, I let the computer decide (even though it doesn’t know what is a cheque). Who cares whether it is American or British English, as long as the message gets across.
Thursday, August 2, 2007
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4 comments:
Welcome aboard ...
Yup I guess we are all getting old.. it was always Zed and Zero .... It was never zee and not "Naught" ...
I still remember being beaten up by my teach if i ever said anyhing other than Zero or Zed ...
Nice writeup . lok forward to more form your side ..
Hi Param,
we can shake hands- here in Germany, we were also taught to pronounce zed and zero and cheque and all that... it gets washed away here, too, but that seems to a world-wide thing.
I find it perfectly okay to stick with what you learned and to heck with people who feel the need to fashion up with a dialect that isn't theirs in the first place.
I surely have a German accent when speaking English, and that is because I am not a Native speaker. You were brought up with British English, so be proud of it and keep it up!
Yours always,
Andrea
Hi Param,
I read this today. So this is your hidden side. Lovely thought, which actually gets one thinking. Hope to read more of you.
Yours always,
farida
after reading this i was left wondering why u wrote this. not that i didnt like ur post. but still the same i wonder why u wrote this.
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