Do you say care-uh-mel or car-mel?

do you say care-uh-mel or car-mel?

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ca-ram-ull

car-ar-mel

ca-ra-mel

Meme sauce

kentucky fried 'mel

car-mull
my autistic brain wants to say "care-a-mell" but "care-a-mell-ization" is 10000x gayer than "car-mull-ization"

Both - depending on the situation. Same with Caribbean.

>hyuk hyuk words r gay

God damn it, Cletus.

cahr-muhl

This exposes yet another fatal flaw in the hebrew-anglo language.
Btw it's kara-Mel.

Im being consistent you mongoloid. You actually, unironically say "care-a-mell-ization?" Thats pretty astounding.

Nigger, it's fucking spelt with an a after the r, so you pronounce it as such

Just like the G in neighbor.

Please, get your GED before arguing with me Billy Bob Eugene Jr.

where I live, the c is silent and the e is barely pronounced, so it's just erml

>Btw it's kara-Mel.
that is how i pronounce it desu

Howdy, neighbor!

kuh-ruhah-meyl

Send me a vocaroo of your effeminate pronunciation of the word "caramelization" and I will stop roasting your fragile ass. Until then you're a faggot.

Kümeakukonpayaymün

Girugamesh!

jag-spa-roo

>dispenser out of napkins
>old person asks for serviettes

That's what they're called though...
Why do americans hate language so much?

autism

Only correct answers.
Americans don't have butcher the English language.

England still trying to take a language all for them selves and not realize there is this beautiful thing called "Dialects?" Curb your neo-imperialism

Also, we invented potato chips but you still call them crisps

youtube.com/watch?v=4My_oUMe01g

depends if i'm talking about the sauce or the square candies

Care-ah-mel

Carah mol

'mel

ca-ra-mel because I'm talking about caramel not a fucking mountain range

Car-mel when it comes to things caramelized like onions or meats.
Cara-mell when it comes to candies and sweets.

better gay than retarded as fuck

This is the correct pronunciation, the word incorporates the latin word "mel" meaning honey. So to butcher the pronunciation is to remove the meaning and origin. Which is that it is honey like, deriving from cane as it was originally spanish cala and then french cara.

Saying carmel careuhmel is gross and idiotic.

>Americans don't have butcher the English language.
>don't have butcher the English language.
>don't have butcher
before you shit on amerifats you should probably check your own writing first.

t. not an amerifat

Yeah, kinda like how the English butchered the English language ~1350?

>Car-mel
Retard.

Keer-a-meel

The English language is great, so much variety:

Primary Branch:
- English-English (also known as correct)
Secondary Regional branches:
- American-English,
- Canadian-English,
- Australian-English
- Indian-English

Ahaha what a fantastic world we live in, soo much regional variety as well as the official standard English as defined by Englishmen.

>- Indian-English
I wasn't aware this existed beyond 'I am phoning from your insurers about your recent car accident'

In 50 - 100 years it'll all be American-English though. You would have thought with their far reaching media they'd have the responsibility and respect to also spread English-English. Instead of blatantly trying to stamp it out.

I'll admit their version is closer to English-English but there are dialect differences.

>American English
Otherwise known as Ebonics.

ka-ra-melli.

No its care of mell

I don't fucking say it at all because sweets are for faggots, savory master race.

care-mell

You also have more regional variants within each of those.

カラメル

Yup

caw-fee

>do you say care-uh-mel or car-mel?
Why yes, yes I do.

I've always heard American/Canadian English is the closest to the "natural" way to speak. Ignore people from newfoundland and Texas.

That's why even brits sing in "american" English. Look it up.

Also the spelling, every current dictionary, and common fucking sense says a lot of things the English pronounce are wrong.

It is. I have no idea why people still believe the "English-English is 100% right" meme

Car-a-mel, but car-mel-ize.

This.

You're definitely right about that first thing, you only have to fool around with your mouth a little to realise that American sounds are easy to make. But there are variants in pronunciation in both England and America which aren't logical if you look at the word phonetically, and caramel is one of them. The English pronunciation is the phonetically logical one for that particular word, regardless of which accent you pronounce it in.

>I'm too young to remember when gay meant lame.