I do
- 11 months
I know it’s me just being a particular asshole, but I really don’t like the pronunciation data… it’s honestly tiresome, problematic, and outdated. It’s pronounced DATA.
- 11 months
I vacillate between the two. Really depends on the words surrounding “data”.
Elaine Cortez@lemm.eeEnglish
11 monthsI alternate between the two pronunciations depending on whatever I vibe with at the time, much like with how I spell colour/color
- 11 months
A local radio DJ said once that if he’s feeling fancy he says “Da Ta” like “ta-da!” Cracked me up way more that it should have.
- 11 months
I do, but that’s because “now these points of data make a beautiful line, and we’re out of beta, we’re releasing on time.”
If Data had feelings, he’d be very upset right now.
- 11 months
Is that meant to be /æ/ as in “dad” or /ɑː/ as in “spa”? I find people do not agree on which sound the spelling <ah> indicates.
- 11 months
Oh I assure you, I would have used IPA if my goal was to accurately convey my pronunciation.
- 11 months
For his name I say data but when talking about data I say data but when I say database I say data and when I watch 1986’s Willow with Warwick Davis I say data
- 11 months
What does Willow (1986) have to do with data? Isn’t it, like, a sword-and-sorcery fantasy movie?
Oh I bet there’s a character with a name that sounds like the word “data”.
- 11 months
You should probably watch willow. It’s not terrible. Val kilmer with a sword.
- 11 months
There’s a kid who calls her father dada (dadda?..sp?) throughout the movie
- SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zoneEnglish11 months
American. Day-duh.
Data: First, the two A’s/vowels:
The first of two A’s gets the “Aey” sound, the second gets the “Ah” sound.
Then, because I’m from California, the ah becomes uh.
Then, similarly, the “tuh” has a hard T at the beginning. But again because California/USA, the T becomes a D (British: butter (“buttah”, hard t’s), usa: budder(soft t’s or d’s))
Thus: day-duh.
- 11 months
I don’t know, because I have no idea how the Star Trek character says it…
- 11 months
Yep! Though now that I’ve seen that, I’ll use Data’s preferred pronunciation when talking about the character
- 11 months
I’ve taught statistics for over 20 years. I flipflop on this constantly, sometimes in the middle of a sentence. Even more disturbing: I don’t have a consistent position, at least grammatically, on whether it’s singular or plural.
- 11 months
It’s sort of like the dual pronunciation of the word ‘a’ in English. While that has more distinct rules, it’s still mostly which one feels nicer.
Christian@lemmy.mlEnglish
11 monthsAnother one for me is “route”.
edit: On further thought, it only works both ways as a synonym for a highway, if I’m talking about a path more generally the root pronunciation sounds wrong.
- 11 months
There are three variants I’m aware of: /eɪ/ as in “day”, /æ/ as in “dad”, and /ɑː/ as in “spa”. I personally say it with /æ/.
- 11 months
Brits pronounce it day-ta, Americans, Canadians and Australians pronounce it dah-ta. Data pronounces it Day-ta.
Luke@lemmy.mlEnglish
11 monthsAmerican here, I can’t speak for Canada, but I don’t think I’ve ever heard any Americans in the US in real conversations say it differently than it is in Star Trek.
I’ve lived in nearly every major region of the US, so if there’s a place where they still pronounce it like “dah-ta” it must be a very small regional thing. Normal working class people having actual conversions everywhere I’ve ever been say “day-ta”.
I’ve read before that Patrick Stewart is the reason for that changing, but I don’t know if that’s true. Seems like an outsized influence for one guy to have on culture, but maybe!
- 11 months
Interesting. From some googling it looks like America is a mix of both but leaning towards day-ta, whereas the other countries are more consistently as I said.
I have a British friend who now lives in Canada and works in tech and has changed the way he says it (from day-ta to dah-ta, or really more like dah-da) for convenience. I had thought that it was an Atlantic divide but seems like there’s more to it.
frostycakes@lemmy.mlEnglish
11 monthsAmerican with an accent that is functionally General American here: it’s day-duh, the t gets flapped. Dah-ta sounds very off to my ears, if anywhere in the US pronounces it that way, it’s probably one of the weirder accents from the northeast.

















