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SuzyQ ,
@SuzyQ@sh.itjust.works avatar

I have an inkling that the two Arkansas are pronounced differently. “Are-Kansas” and “Are-Can-Saw”.

abouttocomealive ,
@abouttocomealive@lemmy.world avatar

One is Akansas

Aatube ,
@Aatube@kbin.social avatar

Are-ken-saw, A-kan-saw and a Kan-sahs

SuzyQ ,
@SuzyQ@sh.itjust.works avatar

I see that now. I did not see it then.

wander1236 ,
@wander1236@sh.itjust.works avatar

One has no R

SuzyQ ,
@SuzyQ@sh.itjust.works avatar

I see that now. I did not see it then.

Nougat ,

That's because Arkansas (ARE-can-saw) retained the native language pronounciation, while Kansas (CAN-zuhs) was Anglicanized.

misophist ,

Today I learned the native language was French!

Nougat ,

The word “Arkansas” came from the Quapaw Indians, by way of early French explorers. ... The state’s name has been spelled several ways throughout history. In Marquette and Joliet’s Journal of 1673, the Indian name is spelled AKANSEA. In LaSalle’s map a few years later, it’s spelled ACANSA. A map based on the journey of La Harpe in 1718-1722 refers to the river as the ARKANSAS and to the Indians as LES AKANSAS. In about 1811, Captain Zebulon Pike, a noted explorer, spelled it ARKANSAW.

NeoNachtwaechter ,

But where is Are-Cannot-Saw?

badcommandorfilename ,

Next to Coloradon’t

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