Hi all!
I sure hope someone replies to this. I joined these forums solely in order to ask my question: How do you pronounce "Northanger" as in Austen's novel?
Thanks so much!
Katie
Hi all!
I sure hope someone replies to this. I joined these forums solely in order to ask my question: How do you pronounce "Northanger" as in Austen's novel?
Thanks so much!
Katie
Well, northanger, of course!
(Just some english humor)
I'm extremely northanger-y with you right now......Originally Posted by Maxos
SOMEBODY HELP A GIRL OUT
I agree with Logos.Originally Posted by Logos
Though I have heard it pronounced a few different ways, I believe the most popular goes as Logos mentioned, but also with a strong 'a,' like in 'slate.'
Welcome to the forum, by the way.![]()
Wow, thanks so much Logos and Mono. Also, the warm welcome was delightful and much appreciated. :-)
Hi..I know the last post in this thread was like a year old..but I just want to say that I also stumbled on this site by accident while trying to look for info on how to pronounce NorthangerThanks a lot to Logos and Mono.
I'm currently reading Northanger Abbey.
"Deep in the fundamental heart of mind and universe...there is a reason."
- Douglas Adams
Is it any good? How does it compare to her other works (if you or anyone has read many Jane Austin novels). I'm not that big a fan of Austin but that one seemed to intrigue me and I've been meaning to read it.Originally Posted by malwethien
I wrote a poem on a leaf and it blew away...
I think it's entertaining enough. I've heard it compared to Pride & Prejudice (for it's emphasis on social class, wealth, etc.), but my favorite is still Pride & Prejudice.Originally Posted by Charles Darnay
The characters are pretty funny (especially the heroine Catherine Morland) but the story is pretty simple in itself. It's a pretty thin book so I recommend you read it. I'm sure you'd enjoy it if you're an Austen fan.
By the way, I must warn you, in Northanger Abbey, you will meet two of the most annoying characters ever on print! I won't tell you who, but you'll soon see upon reading it.
Go read it then come back here so we can discuss it![]()
"Deep in the fundamental heart of mind and universe...there is a reason."
- Douglas Adams
Sorry but you're all wrong! It's pronounced North-hanger. It's spelled as such in a list by Cassandra Austen (Jane's sister) giving the dates and years of the writing of Jane's novels.
("Hanger" is a Hampshire and Sussex dialect word meaning a steep, wooded hillside.)
I've always wondered how to pronounce it as well. I say it every way imaginable to please whoever I'm with.
I really enjoyed the book. It was different from the other novels in my opinion but it was quite interesting.
Never allow yourself to be defined by the passing fancy of a corrupt culture.
"Come away O human child!To the waters of the wild, With a faery hand in hand, For the worlds more full of weeping than you can understand."
W.B.Yeats
"If it looks like a Dwarf and smells like a Dwarf, then it's probably a Dwarf (or a latrine wearing dungarees)"
Artemins Fowl and the Lost Colony by Eoin Colfer
my poems-please comment Forum Rules
I always understood it was as north'ang'er with a very soft 'g' like at the end of 'sang'. There is no harsh 'ger' sound.
“Madness is the inability to communicate your ideas. It’s as if you were in a foreign country, able to see and understand everything that’s going on around you but incapable of explaining what you need to know or of being helped, because you don’t understand the language they speak there."
"We’ve all felt that."
"And all of us, one way or another, are mad.”
- Veronika Decides To Die by Paulo Coelho