Why do people say free instead of three ?

Soldato
Joined
16 Jul 2007
Posts
7,691
Location
Stoke on Trent
OK, this has been bugging me for a while. So I'm asking you people who say FREE (?) instead of three to explain yourselves.

It made me think of this when someone at the canteen at work asked for "free toast" ? Did he not want to pay for it ?
 
Last edited:
Some people have a dialect, It annoys me sometimes but so do people who say "barthe" instead of bath,
You're northern, though? So you're going to pronounce bath as bæθ (æ as in lad) as apposed to bɑːθ (a: as in father). The former is Americanised, and, frankly, wrong :p
 
Forget all that. I want to hear from people who say "I live at number free" " I went to the shop and got FREE bottles of pop"


...ETC
 
People who say "free" instead of "three" either were not taught growing up, or are incapable, of placing their tongue behind the upper teeth in the way necessary to produce the "th". Instead they take the lazy way and don't use their tongue at all.

They'd also say words such as "thoughtful" ("foughtful") and "therapy" ("ferapy") in the same say. They seem to be able to pronounce "though" correctly, however.


With regards to the "bath"/"barth" debacle, it's not so strange to me. I come from Northern Ireland, where we generally pronounce the letter "r" very harshly. The English have a very soft "r", so it tends to slip in even when it's not technically used in the word. If I said "barth", you would definately notice the "r". If a posh English person says it to me, I don't notice it. In fact, it sounds more like "bawwth" to me.

What irks me, however, is when stupid English people actually include it when WRITING words, such as the aforementioned "barth" ("bath"), "farther" ("father") and "carnt" ("can't").
 
Back
Top Bottom