Sen-tar
Because that's the only way I've ever even heard it pronounced. This thread is gonna be wild.
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Sen-tar
Because that's the only way I've ever even heard it pronounced. This thread is gonna be wild.
I thought this question would get almost no attention, but so far I've gotten almost one response per minute. Well predicted.
I even learned that local language changes things from a couple replies, which I hadn't considered.
Me too. I'm not a pedantic Latin-pronouncer who'd say "ken-tower"
I recognise that “kentawur” is correct, but reject it because “sentar” just sounds more correct.
Just because an English word was originally Latin and is written the same way, doesn't mean it's pronounced the same way. It's an English word now. It has an English pronunciation, pluralisation and definition that can all be different from the original. "Kentawur" is not correct for the English word.
sen-tor
As in taurus, which rhymes with torus.
That's one of my wife's answers.
You're very prompt.
Correctly, smugly and pretentiously
Nice.
ken-tavr, I think that's similar to how it pronounced in a lot of languges around here, it's also pretty similar how original greeks did it (kένταυροι)
Solid.
Like the other commenter I pronounce it sen-tor. Just like the word "dinosaur" I would pronounce die-no-sor if that makes sense. Both words end in "aur".
...though now you've got me curious about how you and your wife pronounce dinosaur :)
Dino-saw. That's just because of how the DNA molecule character pronounces it in Jurassic Park, and it cracks me up.
I always heard it as dina-sour in Jurassic Park, can't shake that mental reference haha
If it’s in a Greek or ancient Latin context I pronounce it with a hard C, but if it’s a general English context I pronounce it with a soft C.
I’m not sure what the third way would be.
Man, English is a mess.
Be fair. We inherited most of that mess from the French.
I pronounce it like sen + tar, and accent it like boxcar. Can't think of a reason, that's just how it looks to me.
Scent-ore
Simply "englishified" from French where I’ve ever heard only one way, Centaur (100 tor).
sen-tar
"sen-" like "cent" (like 25 cents), and "-tar" like "a tar pit"
Cent-our
Cent-aur.
¢-aur — I'm not sure why I pronounce it that way; it's just how I've always pronounced it.
sen-tar.
i could see sen-tor.
Ken (as the name) - ta (with a hard T and A as in catapult) - ur (with an u like in Vonnegut's name)
tho I'm from europe speaking a weird ass language
Senn-torr
The "taur" is probably the same root as in "Taurus" and "el Toro"¹, which I've only ever heard said like torr, so I say it the same. The first part I don't think is ever said anything other than "senn" right?
¹I can't back that up, since they mean bull not horse and I have no sources. We do see the same root pop up in "Minotaur" from the same language though, and that is a part bull part man.
I pronounce it "Phil". And he would appreciate it if you would stop staring at his missing eye.
Cen-toor
Sin tar is the usual way, though it'll sometimes come out more sin tawr, where the au is a bit more drawn out.
Sin tore is a fairly common one.
However, sin tar is more common, at least with what I've heard in meat space. That's a fairly limited thing though, since most of the people I have talked to over my fifty years have been fellow southerners. We do tend to use softer vowels in most cases, and tar is softer than tore in the way we tend to do vowels.
However, with the latin and Greek origins of the word, I'd argue that the tar or tawr would lean closer to that than tore, just because of similar words. When an au is present in medical terminology (which is where almost all of my latin and Greek comes from) it usually gets pronounced aw or ah, not oh.
But, I never hear anyone pronounce the initial C as a K, and that's the way it would have been in both of those languages originally. The Greek version is spelled with a K, when written with the usual alphabet rather than Greek. Kentauros.
Which is an aside.
Wikipedia lists the two I did as the usual pronunciations, fwiw. And all the dictionaries with audio options are either those two, or slight variations of them, where the au sound is rounder or flatter than the norm.
Thing is, it's a word in a living language. Whatever the original English pronunciation may have been, that can change, so supporting a pronunciation is kind of meaningless. What matters is consensus over time, and by location.
So, a regional accent that sounds more like cent-ur is just as valid in that region, it just isn't standard. So would any other variant be, if there's enough people using it to be called a consensus.
Sen-towr
Sen-tar. I used to say sen-tore as a kid (as in taurine) but I think it sounds better the other way. Also easier to say in my opinion.
Sehn-tar, because I am American and that's how I learned to say it. How am I meant to justify a common pronunciation?
Cent as sent + taur as tor. We pronounce most greek c's as s in english as is cicero or cent being pronounced with an s sound instead of a k sound. Tor is the same as in taurus. Mine is not the only correct pronunciation, my explanation is just the justification for my specific pronunciation
Wait you’re telling me it’s Kickero? 🤯
Back in his day, yes. In modern greek it is sisero and in modern latin it is Chichero. Similarly, in Julius Caesar's day, his name would have been pronounced Kai-zar and in modern latin and italian, it is Chai-zar.