Its often the case that people of a foreign land will probably pronounce your name in some other way. I think they try to relate it to their own speech/langauge. My name is Nikhil. During my univ stay , here at baltimore ,usa , I have found many different ways that I can pronounce my name.
One observation is , different groups in america will pronounce it differently, and all the people of that group will pronounce it in the same way. (Based on my observation, which is atleast 5 different people from same group).
I'll add new entries as I get to hear them. Also remember that they werent just given the name and told to speak. In each case I had pronounced my name loud-and-clear.
1. Arabs,irani,afgani,yemen,etc :
nikhil becomes ni-khai-el (to me this sounds kyrgiz or russian like mikhail)
2. mostly white of baltimore area(I dont know where they actually come from):
nikhil becomes nicole or ni-kh-ole (damn! I dont like this one bit...)
3. black of baltimore area(dont know where they come from,must admit this happend only 3times):
nikhil became nicolai? (I dont get the relation in this one).
4. chini people(dont know actual origin):
nikhil --> nikeel (no 'ha' sound at all)
so till now
pronounce={nikhil,nikeel,nicolai? ,nicole,nikhail}
[:D] I just think this is funny.
I think this is natural,but I would like to think that I would be able to pronounce foreign names more accurately in first try.
One indication is that this means usa is a diverse country , and if this continues , it will probably end up like India one day.
I'm pronounced saa-raaa-ng. Interesting observation!
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