0
Usenet Posted 17 years ago
Usage

Jon Stewart Show - "'murica"!

On The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, he sometimes pronounces "America" as "'murica" and it's funny.
Is Stewart extracting the Michael out of certain Americans? :-D

Nick from England
  

Top answer

[nq:1]On The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, he sometimes pronounces "America" as "'murica" and it's funny. Is Stewart extracting the Michael out of certain Americans? :-D[/nq] Slightly.

  • [nq:1]On The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, he sometimes pronounces "America" as "'murica" and it's funny.
  • Is Stewart extracting the Michael out of certain Americans?
  • :-D[/nq] Slightly.
  • It is a reference to a pronunciation in which the initial 'A' is (almost) silent.
  • S.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

3 Answers
0
[nq:1]On The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, he sometimes pronounces "America" as "'murica" and it's funny. Is Stewart extracting the Michael out of certain Americans? :-D[/nq]
Slightly. It is a reference to a pronunciation in which the initial 'A' is (almost) silent.
From the OED:
Merkin, n.2
Chiefly U.S. slang.
(Alteration of AMERICAN n. (probably after U.S. pronunciation), perh
0
[nq:1]On The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, he sometimes pronounces "America" as "'murica" and it's funny.[/nq]
It's his nod to LBJ.
0
[nq:1]On The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, he sometimes pronounces "America" as "'murica" and it's funny. Is Stewart extracting the Michael out of certain Americans? :-D Nick from England[/nq]
aMURaca (only secondarily "aMURca") is the real way people say it, in my experience. Well, my experience is gained from a number of comic examples in cartoons and movies of politicians. Some of them are "

Related Questions