Submitted by bleahdeebleah t3_xu1snf in Maine
Do you pronounce the A like 'awl' or like 'pal'? I've always been 'awl' but I am told some heathens may use the second version.
Submitted by bleahdeebleah t3_xu1snf in Maine
Do you pronounce the A like 'awl' or like 'pal'? I've always been 'awl' but I am told some heathens may use the second version.
The Maine way
[deleted]
The only way
So, I'm from TN and my spouse is from NC and we both Scawluhp. I had to reread OPs example a few times because I didn't understand how 'pal' would be involved ^_^
This is how I used to say it until my husband's family joked about it (they aren't from Maine)
Your husband's family is wrong. And you can tell them I said so.
The Massachusetts way, too. Skawluhp
Here in Mass, that's how we say it also.
Rhymes with "wallop!"
Exactly!
Skal up
Heathen
Dirty Communist
Rusty terrorist
And yet you asked! 🤣
But with a long A tho?
Yep.
Scawl-up.
I say it the same way I say Worcester
This is the way
Skloop.
Scaw-lup
All
Scallop
ScAlop?
Do you say scalloped potatoes different than you say scallop the bivalve? (i think theyre bi valves)
I say both like the Midwest - rhymes with pal… my Maine cousins are different about the animal but I can’t answer for potato
seafood: scawluhp
hot baked potato dish: sgallop
decoration: sgallup
No it's pronounced the same. Also scalloped edges. Same. Rhymes with pal is always wrong.
Here's the thing. When I read it, it's ah like pal. But, if I'm just saying it, I say it correctly, like awl.
I use BOTH, but primarily the second way, born in Hancock county, raised there, too. Both my brothers fish, worked for the family restaurant. Doesn’t matter how you “qualify” the pronunciation, however, because IT DOESN’T MATTER.
Maine is riddled with accents, from downeast to transatlantic, to Boston bastardizations.
This. I waffle between the two for no particular reason. Moon, sun, stars, booze, whatever the person nearest me is saying…
What the hell I didn’t know the way I say scallop was a hint that I’m from away…
Because it’s not.
It’s “scallop”. Because you “call” someone on the phone, not “call” them
Awl!
It’s a caramel-caramel thing for me. Whatever comes out is what you get.
Same, it's contextual for me. Caramel pronounced with both a's if its a candy or something fancy, just plain old "carmel" if its a flavoring in something else. Scawlops if its by itself or still fresh in the shell, Scahlops if its stuffed, battered or in something else. Dunno why for either!
ess-cahllop
The reyes dice todo
I pronounce it as scallop
My dad was a scallop diver for many years, I’ve always felt that the person who jumps in the ocean at 6am in January to go get ‘em gets to decide how to pronounce it, and it’s scawlup.
I have heard the different pronunciations so often that don't know anymore.
Both pronunciations sound wrong in my head so I just say the version that sounds the least incorrect that particular day.
Scawluhp
When I say skall-up, I feel like such a fraud. 😱 It’s skawl-up. I’d never heard it pronounced any other way until I left the state…
Hearing it the pal way makes me cringe.
It's like how most people feel when they hear "moist."
Yuck.
Pal. But I'm from the south. Don't ask me how to say oil. For 33 years I said it my way. Never had anyone tell me how wrong it was until I got to Maine and had to call around for oil prices. 🤣 Now at 34 years old I just read the room and pronounce appropriately.
I had my first scallops when I lived in the FL Gulf Coast. It was the “pal” pronunciation there. I’ve heard it both ways since I moved from there though.
Scap
Skawl if I'm being casual, Scaal if I'm wearing tight pants and a cardigan.
[deleted]
That pronunciation is by no means exclusive to Maine
S (like snake) cal like pal lup like pup scalup ¿
Scahl-up the awl way. Though I always thought ah like deeha eta
I've noticed people from Mid Atlantic states tend to say it like "pal" while New Englanders say it like "awl".
The correct way.
Pal version
Scallop
I say it both ways. No rhyme or reason. I'm originally from the south, so I think I said it more like "pal" with the short a, but I've been living here for 20 years, so now I seem to pronounce it in a hybrid way
Like pal but I've used awl infrequently.
Skallup..,. MA lurker
Scawlup sounds like it’d be the Viking word for cod piece. I saw scal -like Al Bundt-lup but I’m scolded every time by my familial Mainers.
Depends on price and setting for me. Scallop is always for fried and/or a large serving, quality isn't the factor, but for the record - this is my preference. But for settings where they're served at a high price with only a small serving, I always use "scawllope" but honestly, I've only been satisfied by this serving maybe once or twice based on price/quality
[removed]
SkAAHHHHlup
Skal-up
Sc-aah-lop.
So like how you would pronounce "pal". Never heard it said the other way.
The second way…I guess I’m a heathen
scawl when its food but scal when its a scalloped edge. i don’t know why
Lobstahh
Now do weir. Weer or ware. Loam: lome or loom. Clap-boards or clabberds. Star-board or stabberd. Noreaster or Notheaster.
I've been saying it the 'pal' way but it always sounded wrong. Now I know why.
skollup
Sc-AWL-up.
This Sc-AL-up nonsense needs to end.
I'm originally from near Rochester, NY. I have the flat A, no not nasal, accent and say scale-up. But, I don't talk about them so there's that.
Edit: I live in Vermont now. Not as much scallop talk here.
The awl sound comes from the less common spelling scollop, but has now become an alternative pronunciation for the more common spelling scallop
Sc-al-op
That’s me. I’m the heathen
Depends where you are and what you are ordering. The classy way with awl when fine dining. If fried at a clam shack then it’s the other way.
skal-ip
Like 'pal' - mostly out of spite because my parents constantly tried to get me to say it the other way growing up. 0:)
Edited for clarification!
QuiGonLogan t1_iqt8atn wrote
Scawluhp