MovieChat Forums > The Ice Storm (1997) Discussion > Pronunciation of Connecticut

Pronunciation of Connecticut


In the beginning, the train attendant announces New Canaan Connecticut and pronounces it as you would the word "connect." I've never heard it pronounced like that, and Dictionary.com indicates that it is not correct. Any idea why they would choose to have the actor say it like that?

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I ride trains in New England a lot, and all the conductors over-enunciate and exaggerate their pronunciation. It's unnatural but it's very clear.



"You must sing him your prettiest songs, then perhaps he will want to marry you."

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Many scewball comodies were set in Connecticut the place where connections between couples were cut. I suppose this pronunciation refers to film history.

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[deleted]

Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.

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That's not all he pronounced wrong. When I was a New Yorker many years ago, commuter trains left from Grand Central TERMINAL. Grand Central Station was a stop on the old Lexington Avenue subway line.

There was a conductor on a Massachusetts commuter line who pronounced the name of a town as Con-cord, but the natives pronounced it Kawn-kid.

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You need a hearing exam. Natives pronounce it "CON-kud". "Kid"??? Give me a break!

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I am not a moron.

Guess there really are people who act worse than 12 year olds.

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I assumed he was just trying to be folksy with the "Connect-icut" pronunciation, but I agree that calling it Grand Central Station is an obvious (minor) mistake. A conductor would know the correct terminology especially since he says the train originates from there.

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