Is pronounced "Wah-sah-ga" Beach, NOT "Wah-say-ga" Beach
Ms. C.
P.S. - always glad to help
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NOPE!
It IS WAH SAY GA or I'm not buying any products there as a tourist.
I know, I hate people calling Toronto Ta ra na, but if they're spending a lot of money here, I guess I can tolerate it a bit...
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Same thing as to-MAY-to or to-MAH-to. No right or wrong.
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I called Wasaga Beach city hall.
A recording said "thankyou for calling the wa-SAH-gah Beach municipal office"
Could the person who made the recording on the official city hall answering service be wrong in pronouncing it wah-SAH-gah?
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Are you guys serious? I got called out here for reporting traffic saying WAH-SAY-GAH Beach, and changed it to WAH-SAW-GAH. I had heard WAH-SAY-GAH since childhood.
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Ms. C. wrote:
Is not too late (is never too late) to get it right, Jody
I have always known it to be Wa Say Ga beach.
Even the Greyhound bus drivers used to say it that way.
There's no more Greyhound today.
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It's the same pronunciation as the Nottawasaga River or Nottawasaga Inn.
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Years ago when Libyan madman Moammar was still running rampant, news organizations could not settle on how to spell his last name. They used Kahdaffi, Gadaffy etc. Until one clever AP news reporter in Libya actually got to meet with the dictator in person.
The story goes he pulled out his notepad and pen and handed it to the Libyan nutbar and asked him to spell his name in English.
The result -- Gadhafi. Straight from the horse's mouth so to speak.
AP has used the spelling ever since.
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Ms. C. wrote:
Pronunciation is not an issue for reporters covering the mayor of Wasaga Beach
His name is Smith
But, are you absolutely sure that it is not spelled Smyth? or even Smythe?
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Ms. C. wrote:
The issue is respect for 24,800 proud residents, mainly senior citizens, with little else to do but sit in front of the TV all day watching CTV news mangle the name of their town. Oh, the humanity
Reminds me of how almost everyone misspells 'St. Catharines' as 'St. Catherines'.
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Ms. C. wrote:
The issue is respect for 24,800 proud residents, mainly senior citizens, with little else to do but sit in front of the TV all day watching CTV news mangle the name of their town. Oh, the humanity
Seems like the aging demographic coupled with the small town feel would make Wasaga Beach prime territory for a franchise expansion of High Street Fish and Chips?
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Clearly this is another case of people putting the emPHAsis on the wrong sylLABle.
Online!
Ryan has a book out about his time as a homicide detective.
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Ms.C. , you will soon see me cruising the streets of Wah sah ga in a new tow truck again. Finally getting the approval to return to work very shortly.
Last edited by mic'em (January 14, 2023 12:43 pm)
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Ms. C. wrote:
While on this side-topic, what is the generally-accepted Canadian pronunciation of "Porsche"?
Porch...
Glen Warren wrote:
Seems like the aging demographic coupled with the small town feel would make Wasaga Beach prime territory for a franchise expansion of High Street Fish and Chips?
Sea food has become expensive; seniors have deep pockets but short arms. Not a good combo
Also seniors are upset that CTV is today pronouncing it "Wah Say Ga" instead of the correct "Wah Sah Ga",
Folks are descending on Mayor Smith's office and demanding intervention
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My grandfather (deceased for over 50 years) built a cabin there. It grew into a cottage, as bedrooms were added and the outhouse was replaced with a bathroom, and I spent every summer there growing up. Still have a house there, but we live elsewhere.
We always said wah-SAY-ga, never wah-SAW-ga. The only time I ever heard wah-SAW-ga was on CKVR tv.
Did gramps build your place on the NottawaSAYga River?
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georgio1 wrote:
Did gramps build your place on the NottawaSAYga River?
It was on the bay side. But I think djwildbill in post #3 nailed it. There's no right or wrong here.
I'm just telling you how we pronounced it in our little corner of the place. That was the accepted pronunciation. I can't say it your way, it feels unnatural.
It feels strange to even be debating it. I mean the conflict has existed long before any of us were born. The Hurons probably argued about it with the Redcoats.
Wasaga is in the news today and CTV Barrie is getting right while CTV Toronto isn't.
the end
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I expect the news was probably about the town's opposition to unauthorized auto rallies. I know they intended to moblize the Gest... sorry, the OPP.
I was there two weeks ago, but I always clear out ahead of holiday weekends.
Once school starts, the place becomes much more comfortable. But I miss the days when water came from a hand pump outside the back door, and my mom cooked on a Coleman stove powered by gasoline.
We won't talk about the outhouse, but there were three of them in a cluster. Neighbours, ya know. Everyone was fully visible on every visit, and no one cared at all. It was part of life in those days.
Not to mention the ice truck that came by with blocks of ice in sawdust. They had a barrel of water, and would dip your block in it to wash off the sawdust so you could take it inside and put it in the icebox.
I have a pair of the tongs they used to use.
Do I qualify as a local?
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Oh yeah, one other thing I remember from early days at the cottage was my mom making me turn off Dave Mickie.
"I can't STAND that guy" she said.
Who was I to argue, I was just a kid?
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The police have been somewhat successful in diverting the " rally " participants away from Wasaga. A number of them have been collecting in various large parking lots in Collingwood, only to be descended on by officers like flies on fresh cowpie. CTV2 Barrie news reporter Ian Duffy was on hand in the Canadian Tire lot and interviewed a young fellow who had been checked out by police . I was standing just off camera and had a pleasant conversation with Mr Duffy afterwards. He is a very nice young man, and is one of the better talent on that team in my opinion. I wish him well going forward.
mic'em wrote:
CTV2 Barrie news reporter Ian Duffy was on hand in the Canadian Tire lot and interviewed a young fellow who had been checked out
Having passed the pronunciation test, Ian Duffy qualifies for a complimentary burger & fries at the Dard
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That's a risky proposition! It looks like the Dard is about to be razed. A piece of history.
With apologies to the late Sam Cooke:
Don't know much about history
Don't know much biology
Don't know much about a science book
Don't know much about the French I took
But I know that one + one is two
And I know that this is true . . .
The Dard will fall down before Wah-sa-Gah's beach-front gets re-developed.
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I'm 68 years old. I can't remember when there was no Dardanella. It's a part of the place. It will be a sad day when the Dard goes.
I remember when the bikers brought a hay bale into the town square, dropped it, and set it alight. Ha ha, those were the days.
The arcade, lost to a devastating fire.
Childhood memories, gone.
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We lost the "Windjammer" which was across the road. I tilted a few in there. It was called something else before the "Windjammer", but my memory is failing.
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I think it was the "Capstan Inn" . But I'm an old guy with failing memory.