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Post by katlady on Feb 15, 2023 21:04:12 GMT
I know there are regional differences, just curious how you would pronounce “Coyote”?
I was watching a YouTube video, and the speaker kept saying “Coyot”. I keep screaming in my head, it is “coyoteeeee”. Ok, not that many “e” but I needed to emphasize the “e”. 😂
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Post by monklady123 on Feb 15, 2023 21:06:16 GMT
Definitely with a long "e" at the end.
Although going by the rules of English grammar it should be "ky-ot" with a long "o".
This reminds me of a funny thing we always observed when I was in the Peace Corps in a French-speaking country. Since "corps" is a French word we Americans always pronounced it that way (and in fact his is how "Peace Corps" is pronounced) -- "Cor" no "p" and no "s". But the French people who I met there would pronounce all the letters so it sounded like "corpse" because they had been taught that in English we usually pronounce those final letters. lol
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Post by AussieMeg on Feb 15, 2023 21:12:16 GMT
I have always pronounced it with the 'e' at the end.
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pinklady
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Post by pinklady on Feb 15, 2023 21:13:13 GMT
When I hear “k-eye-ot” with a long o it’s usually a toothless hillbilly talking. 😂🤣
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The Birdhouse Lady
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Post by The Birdhouse Lady on Feb 15, 2023 21:13:21 GMT
I say it with a long e.
I mean it is Wiley Coyoteeee
not Wiley Coyot
beep beep
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Post by katlady on Feb 15, 2023 21:15:50 GMT
Definitely with a long "e" at the end. Although going by the rules of English grammar it should be "ky-ot" with a long "o". This reminds me of a funny thing we always observed when I was in the Peace Corps in a French-speaking country. Since "corps" is a French word we Americans always pronounced it that way (and in fact his is how "Peace Corps" is pronounced) -- "Cor" no "p" and no "s". But the French people who I met there would pronounce all the letters so it sounded like "corpse" because they had been taught that in English we usually pronounce those final letters. lol But “Coyote” is not an English word. Besides “corps”, “Colonel” is another crazy word to pronounce! Lol!
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Post by katlady on Feb 15, 2023 21:18:22 GMT
When I hear “k-eye-ot” with a long o it’s usually a toothless hillbilly talking. 😂🤣 LOL! Actually, the person in the video was a park ranger!! Which sort of surprised me.
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Post by Rainy_Day_Woman on Feb 15, 2023 21:24:19 GMT
I think we say Coyote without the long e at the end? Like Kai-Oat.
Eta: now that I think of it, I don't know what we say! I think it's mainly without the long e.
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iowgirl
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Jun 25, 2014 22:52:46 GMT
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Post by iowgirl on Feb 15, 2023 21:59:46 GMT
No e. Ky-oat. Seems like only city slickers say the e...
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Post by disneypal on Feb 15, 2023 22:06:00 GMT
I have such a hard time pronouncing this word. For some reason, it is a word I have to really pause and think about before I say it. I always include the e though. To me, when I hear it pronounce Ki-oat, it reminds me of old western movies with gold prospectors ( "Get out from yonder, you durned ki-oat") The reason I have to think about this word before saying it is because it is spelled coyote - which to me, looks like it should be pronounce KOI-o-te instead of ki-yo-te or ki-oat.
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lesley
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Post by lesley on Feb 15, 2023 22:11:45 GMT
I say it with a long e. I mean it is Wiley Coyoteeee not Wiley Coyot beep beep No, no, no! It’s Wile E. Coyote! (I was that child who wondered what his middle name was. 😄)
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Post by disneypal on Feb 15, 2023 22:16:17 GMT
No, no, no! It’s Wile E. Coyote! (I was that child who wondered what his middle name was. 😄) Ha Ha - I actually know that - his middle name is Ethelbert. Originally his name was going to be Don Coyote (as a pun of Don Quixote) - so now you've had your Looney Tunes lesson for the day
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Post by monklady123 on Feb 15, 2023 22:23:58 GMT
But “Coyote” is not an English word. I didn't say it was. I was just mentioning something else this discussion made me think of. Americans often Anglicize words, and following English grammar rules it wouldn't surprise me to hear it pronounced without the "e" at the end. But in Spanish that final "e" is pronounced.
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msladibug
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Post by msladibug on Feb 15, 2023 22:33:30 GMT
I say ki-oat-tee
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peasquared
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Post by peasquared on Feb 15, 2023 23:05:52 GMT
I say ki-oat. As do most people in my area.
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iowgirl
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Post by iowgirl on Feb 15, 2023 23:07:57 GMT
I mean it is Wiley Coyoteeee not Wiley Coyot Wile E. Coyote is a "Ki-oat" ... This is a fun discussion!
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Post by hop2 on Feb 15, 2023 23:08:45 GMT
As in the road runner cartoon Wile-e-coyote
I mean that’s how it was presented to me every Saturday from birth.
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Post by Merge on Feb 15, 2023 23:10:48 GMT
I pronounce the long e at the end, but my rural family and friends mostly don’t.
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Gem Girl
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Post by Gem Girl on Feb 15, 2023 23:13:54 GMT
No e. Ky-oat. Seems like only city slickers say the e... Festus drops in to say: "Iffin's ya' ever gots ta shoot 1 of 'em, ya' takes off the e at the end."
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Post by epeanymous on Feb 15, 2023 23:38:59 GMT
With the E at the end. The only time I have heard it without IRL was when my dad used to pretend to be more from the country than he was (in the same mood he would pronounce animals "animules," which I never figured out).
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Post by librarylady on Feb 15, 2023 23:43:18 GMT
I always said it without the E sound at the end. And then the cartoon added the e on the end. It is my experience that ranchers and the people of West Texas do not have an e sound at the end.
I play to my audience. If I am in the city, the word ends in a long E sound. If I am in the rural area, with ranchers, I don't put an E sound at the end.
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Post by iamkristinl16 on Feb 16, 2023 0:03:27 GMT
I’ve heard it both ways. I usually say it with the “ee”.
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Post by scraplette on Feb 16, 2023 0:05:20 GMT
No e. Ky-oat. Seems like only city slickers say the e... And cartoon watchers! Kai-oat all the way
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gina
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Jun 26, 2014 1:59:16 GMT
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Post by gina on Feb 16, 2023 0:12:48 GMT
I say kye-oh-tee but now you are reminding me that Monica on Yellowstone says "kye-oat" and she's Native American.
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Post by 950nancy on Feb 16, 2023 0:19:37 GMT
The reading teacher in me says it should be Kai oat, but the logical part of my brain says it isn't an English word, so we should pronounce it like its origin of Kai O tee. Either way, we have hoards of them around and they are definitely wiley/wily. Here is one that was about 20 feet from me. I believe he was also the one who went after my pup about 6 weeks later. My pup is also wiley and ninja'd his way out of an attack. In the American Southwest (principally Southern Nevada, Southern Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado) coyote is most often pronounced [kaˈjoʊ. ɾi] (kah-YO-dee) by the majority of the population. In rural areas, it's commonly shortened to [ˈka. joʊt] (KAH-yoht), with the stress shifted to the first syllable. FYI
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Post by peano on Feb 16, 2023 0:32:34 GMT
When one trots through our yard I say "there goes a ki yo tee". When a pack of them howls at night I say "did you hear those ki yo tees last night?"
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Post by Laurie on Feb 16, 2023 0:37:10 GMT
No e in South Dakota. My alma mater mascot is a coyote and you don’t dare put an e on the end.
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Post by freecharlie on Feb 16, 2023 0:42:35 GMT
Both. They interchange
The Phoenix Coyotes has an e
Some of the howling we hear or the things that get chicken are often without an e
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valincal
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Jun 27, 2014 2:21:22 GMT
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Post by valincal on Feb 16, 2023 1:20:45 GMT
I think we say Coyote without the long e at the end? Like Kai-Oat. That’s how I say it in Alberta. 😄
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Post by librarylady on Feb 16, 2023 2:24:44 GMT
I would have sworn we had this discussion about a year ago, but could not find a previous discussion.
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