I was calling it "Warchester Sauce." :|
Same, because that's what it is.
I was calling it "Warchester Sauce." :|
Same, because that's what it is.
Saying it her way ignores all the work Chester put into it's founding:
Battle of Chester
Peach posted the correct way to say it. I started getting tripped out by how we were all saying it differently, and checked on Dictionary.com. I've been living a lie.
you always say a lot of stuff weird pronunciation wise to me but I just didn't say anything.
it's an interesting dynamic for us because you grew up in the far north and I grew up in the farthest south
so to me, a lot of stuff you do or say is kind of weird. whether it be culturally or, pronunciation wise.
I've noticed people from up north have a slightly different attitude and demeanor even, like the way they think about things is different.
and, you didn't even want to go to the beach. lol
oh and they dress different.
pretty much everything is different.
but I find these differences kind of cute and interesting.
like, one distinct thing about you is that you rolled the bottom of your jeans and walked around barefoot.
this is like, a true, "ohio farm boy" "raised in the corn fields" aesthetic. that I thought maybe you'd only see in Memphis or Missouri in the 1960's. it reminds me of something out of a dated novel, like you were an exact living replica of the real life Tom Sawyer.
Peach posted the correct way to say it. I started getting tripped out by how we were all saying it differently, and checked on Dictionary.com. I've been living a lie.
you always say a lot of stuff weird pronunciation wise to me but I just didn't say anything.
I've been saying it the same way within a very different upbringing.
You're likely the one saying it wrong.
Worcestershire sause is named after the *ENGLISH* town where it was created, Worcestor, therefore it's warchestershire as you have to say it in an English accent. If you're talking about Worcestershire, the English county it's also pronounced Warchestershire for the same reasons above.
Wor- sha-shire is how my parents pronounced it so growing up so that's what I called it until I started waiting tables at age 20. An old man told me a joke where the punchline was a man with an accent trying to ask "what's this here sauce?" and it comes out as war-sha- sheer so then I started saying that instead.