Moet pronunciation
Moet pronunciation
Could someone settle a dispute:
Is Moet pronounced "Mow-ee" or "Mow-ett"?
Is Moet pronounced "Mow-ee" or "Mow-ett"?
Moet
Try "Mo--Ay
Correct me if I'm wrong guys.
Bought a bottle of the 98 last night.
Will put a TN up soon.
Cheers
Smithy
home of the mega-red
Re: Moet pronunciation
manning wrote:Could someone settle a dispute:
Is Moet pronounced "Mow-ee" or "Mow-ett"?
As someone who grew up listening to much hip hop - I always thought it was "MOE-wet" based on what I heard in songs coming out of the East Coast.. "bloody americanisms eh!" as my English teacher would yell out...
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food, drink and life in western australia
food, drink and life in western australia
I disagree...it should be Mow-ett...
Listen to the pronunciation from a french speaker:
http://www.bbr.com/sounds/producers/1.wav
Listen to the pronunciation from a french speaker:
http://www.bbr.com/sounds/producers/1.wav
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Adam wrote:Its got a stronger sharper T than poet.Red Bigot wrote:The key is in the accent on the ë: Moët, pronounced as in poet, as rooview said.
You've never heard me use poet as a swear word then?
How about mullet, as in the haircut? Hmm, Mullet & Shandy, I can see the new Oz bubbly on the shelves already.
Cheers
Brian
Life's too short to drink white wine and red wine is better for you too! :-)
Brian
Life's too short to drink white wine and red wine is better for you too! :-)
Would be akin to The Rene Pogel wolf blass once produced... read it backwards...Red Bigot wrote:Adam wrote:Its got a stronger sharper T than poet.Red Bigot wrote:The key is in the accent on the ë: Moët, pronounced as in poet, as rooview said.
You've never heard me use poet as a swear word then?
How about mullet, as in the haircut? Hmm, Mullet & Shandy, I can see the new Oz bubbly on the shelves already.
And no I dont Mullet is quite right...the et is more like the et in wet.
Having lurked for some time this thread has prompted me to sign up ,
from clear memory and French lessons at school.
I am certain this is correct.
The answer is both ways are correct, depending on whether you are using a shortened version , Moet, or the full version Moet et Chandon when speaking.
Pronounce Mow-ay if only saying the first part of Moet et Chandon in short or slang ie Moet. In french the t is silent on its own. The letters et are pronounced ay.
However, if pronouncing the whole name ie Moet et Chandon, then the t is pronounced in Moet so as to provide a flowing pronunciation and joining the words together, which the French encourage when speaking their language.
ie mow-ett-ay-shondonne
as for the others ;
Goss-ay
Perri-ay jou-ay
Veuve Cli-co
Billee-carr or bill-carr
Lauren-Perrier
cheers DB
from clear memory and French lessons at school.
I am certain this is correct.
The answer is both ways are correct, depending on whether you are using a shortened version , Moet, or the full version Moet et Chandon when speaking.
Pronounce Mow-ay if only saying the first part of Moet et Chandon in short or slang ie Moet. In french the t is silent on its own. The letters et are pronounced ay.
However, if pronouncing the whole name ie Moet et Chandon, then the t is pronounced in Moet so as to provide a flowing pronunciation and joining the words together, which the French encourage when speaking their language.
ie mow-ett-ay-shondonne
as for the others ;
Goss-ay
Perri-ay jou-ay
Veuve Cli-co
Billee-carr or bill-carr
Lauren-Perrier
cheers DB
jester wrote:The bloke it's named after was actually Dutch not French so therefore correct pronunciation is Mow - ett........... I think
I concur. This is the official word from LVMH. Apparently standardisation is important to them, and they are going out of their way to make sure everyone is using the same pronunciation.
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IMHO it is totally un-Australian to even suggest that there is another way of pronouncing Moet other than "Mow-ee".
Just like Australian's pronounce Fillet as "Fil - lit" and not "fil - lay", or Herbs as "H-erbs" and not "erbs".
C'mon let's be honest ... the American's have been getting away with butchering the English/French language for years, so why shouldn't we.
Just like Australian's pronounce Fillet as "Fil - lit" and not "fil - lay", or Herbs as "H-erbs" and not "erbs".
C'mon let's be honest ... the American's have been getting away with butchering the English/French language for years, so why shouldn't we.
Cheers
AJ
Cabernet is ... and will always be ... KING!
AJ
Cabernet is ... and will always be ... KING!
Red Bigot wrote:The key is in the accent on the ë: Moët, pronounced as in poet, as rooview said.
Guys guys guys,
The accent on the e is the big difference, as RB mentioned. Not only does it tell you to pronounce the t, but it tells you to pronounce it hard (as in wet) like Adam mentioned.
I think Adam's source (cellar door) is credible enough, but if you're still unsure, take the word of a French colleague of mine who was born and grew up in Bordeaux and Champagne. I'm still having to get used to not pronouncing the c of blanc for sauvignon and cabernet.
Max
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Avant d’être bon, un vin doit être vrai
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Avant d’être bon, un vin doit être vrai
westcoast wrote:Having lurked for some time this thread has prompted me to sign up ,
Welcome aboard!
westcoast wrote:from clear memory and French lessons at school.
I am certain this is correct.
The answer is both ways are correct, depending on whether you are using a shortened version , Moet, or the full version Moet et Chandon when speaking.
Pronounce Mow-ay if only saying the first part of Moet et Chandon in short or slang ie Moet. In french the t is silent on its own. The letters et are pronounced ay.
However, if pronouncing the whole name ie Moet et Chandon, then the t is pronounced in Moet so as to provide a flowing pronunciation and joining the words together, which the French encourage when speaking their language.
ie mow-ett-ay-shondonne
as for the others ;
Goss-ay
Perri-ay jou-ay
Veuve Cli-co
Billee-carr or bill-carr
Lauren-Perrier
cheers DB
DB, I think your french lessons may be becoming a little fuzzy around the edges, the difference between Moët and all the other examples is that little 2-dots over the e. I can't remember what it's called, but I do remember what it does. You are perfectly correct about sounding the "t" in some cases depending on the following word, but with Moët it is sounded whether or not it is followed by "et Chandon", all because of that accented "ë".
Cheers
Brian
Life's too short to drink white wine and red wine is better for you too! :-)
Brian
Life's too short to drink white wine and red wine is better for you too! :-)
I'll chime in.....
Moët is pronounced Mo-ette.......Moet is pronounced Mo-Ay...the umlaut signals that is a word from Dutch/Germanic origins and is pronounced with a hard 'T'......
Noice
Cheers
Dave
Afterthought.....looking at some language sites I don't think the Germans used a umlaut over the 'e', whereas the French use a dieresis (ë).....confused yet....me too....anyways I've always said Mo-ette...Parisians as mentioned are lazy and drop the 't' altogether....
Buy Krug instead
Moët is pronounced Mo-ette.......Moet is pronounced Mo-Ay...the umlaut signals that is a word from Dutch/Germanic origins and is pronounced with a hard 'T'......
Noice
Cheers
Dave
Afterthought.....looking at some language sites I don't think the Germans used a umlaut over the 'e', whereas the French use a dieresis (ë).....confused yet....me too....anyways I've always said Mo-ette...Parisians as mentioned are lazy and drop the 't' altogether....
Buy Krug instead
Last edited by DaveB on Tue Oct 18, 2005 7:42 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Maximus wrote:Red Bigot wrote:I'm still having to get used to not pronouncing the c of blanc for sauvignon and cabernet.
Max, does this mean we have to say sauvignon blan and abernet.
That was not the way the Nautilus guy spoke yesterday!!!!!
Graham
Chardonnay: A drink you have when there is no RED wine, the beer hasn't arrived and the water may be polluted
GrahamB wrote:Max, does this mean we have to say sauvignon blan and abernet.
That was not the way the Nautilus guy spoke yesterday!!!!!
Graham
You and your Nautilus fetish Mr B.
No (I'll bite), the c is silent on the end of "blanc", so the two aforementioned examples should apparently be pronounced sauvignon 'blan' and carbernet 'fran'. You don't change the pronunciation of the word, you simply remove the c and sort of trail off... so that people think you've said it, but they're not quite sure.
Apparently you and I are duelling off for one of Drew's VP's?
Cheers,
Max
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Avant d’être bon, un vin doit être vrai
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Avant d’être bon, un vin doit être vrai