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What is the English pronunciation of pain au chocolat?


Pronunciation of GUI in British EnglishAmericans stereotype Canadian pronunciation of “about”?How did the pronunciation of the word “derby” evolve?Pronunciation of “twenty” in US EnglishThe pronunciation of ending “s”Pronunciation of luxury'Controversy' PronunciationWhat is the English pronunciation of “nougat”?Pronunciation of Middle EnglishAmerican pronunciation of Versailles













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      How do brits and americans pronounce pain au chocolat?










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      How do brits and americans pronounce pain au chocolat?







      pronunciation french






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          In the UK it depends on the speaker but I would say the most common way is pan oh sho-coh-la, with the stress on the la.



          With foreign words I use the nearest English sound. I don't try to make foreign sounds when speaking English - I think it's pretentious.



          In coffee shops, you sometimes hear pain au chocolat or pain aux raisins pronunced as if the last word is English - especially in one chain which spells the second one "pain au raisin". I think what happening there is that the staff are mistaking the last word for an English word. They will confirm your order by saying "a panno chocolate".






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            In the UK it depends on the speaker but I would say the most common way is pan oh sho-coh-la, with the stress on the la.



            With foreign words I use the nearest English sound. I don't try to make foreign sounds when speaking English - I think it's pretentious.



            In coffee shops, you sometimes hear pain au chocolat or pain aux raisins pronunced as if the last word is English - especially in one chain which spells the second one "pain au raisin". I think what happening there is that the staff are mistaking the last word for an English word. They will confirm your order by saying "a panno chocolate".






            share|improve this answer



























              1














              In the UK it depends on the speaker but I would say the most common way is pan oh sho-coh-la, with the stress on the la.



              With foreign words I use the nearest English sound. I don't try to make foreign sounds when speaking English - I think it's pretentious.



              In coffee shops, you sometimes hear pain au chocolat or pain aux raisins pronunced as if the last word is English - especially in one chain which spells the second one "pain au raisin". I think what happening there is that the staff are mistaking the last word for an English word. They will confirm your order by saying "a panno chocolate".






              share|improve this answer

























                1












                1








                1







                In the UK it depends on the speaker but I would say the most common way is pan oh sho-coh-la, with the stress on the la.



                With foreign words I use the nearest English sound. I don't try to make foreign sounds when speaking English - I think it's pretentious.



                In coffee shops, you sometimes hear pain au chocolat or pain aux raisins pronunced as if the last word is English - especially in one chain which spells the second one "pain au raisin". I think what happening there is that the staff are mistaking the last word for an English word. They will confirm your order by saying "a panno chocolate".






                share|improve this answer













                In the UK it depends on the speaker but I would say the most common way is pan oh sho-coh-la, with the stress on the la.



                With foreign words I use the nearest English sound. I don't try to make foreign sounds when speaking English - I think it's pretentious.



                In coffee shops, you sometimes hear pain au chocolat or pain aux raisins pronunced as if the last word is English - especially in one chain which spells the second one "pain au raisin". I think what happening there is that the staff are mistaking the last word for an English word. They will confirm your order by saying "a panno chocolate".







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



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                answered 1 hour ago









                MintyMinty

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