Within a few moments of listening I started asking myself if I'm the only one who doesn't say/think of it as the four-syllable "G-P-R-O" and instead refers to it as a double syllable "G-Pro"/"jeep-roh". Poll?
Asked my teammates, I'm not the only one, phew. Funny how a pronunciation can seem so right or so jarring when you are in a silo though, and it's not something I've ever thought to ask!
Within a few moments of listening I started asking myself if I'm the only one who doesn't say/think of it as the four-syllable "G-P-R-O" and instead refers to it as a double syllable "G-Pro"/"jeep-roh". Poll?
Asked my teammates, I'm not the only one, phew. Funny how a pronunciation can seem so right or so jarring when you are in a silo though, and it's not something I've ever thought to ask!
We had this discussion on our team videocall meeting! And we have both G-P-R-O people and G-Pro people. I personally pronounce it in my head as G-P-R-O using Polish pronunciation of the letters :)
Within a few moments of listening I started asking myself if I'm the only one who doesn't say/think of it as the four-syllable "G-P-R-O" and instead refers to it as a double syllable "G-Pro"/"jeep-roh". Poll?
My next GPRO Podcast interviewee is none other than @Jonathan Beagles (P20) ! We talk about everything GPRO, and got so into it, that we didn't really have time to talk about anything else! See the trailer below, and expect the video to be out tomorrow at 19:00CET!!
Within a few moments of listening I started asking myself if I'm the only one who doesn't say/think of it as the four-syllable "G-P-R-O" and instead refers to it as a double syllable "G-Pro"/"jeep-roh"
Pretty sure @James Hitchen (P11) puts excessive h's (which he probably pronounces haitches) on the end; something like:
Pretty sure @James Hitchen (P11) puts excessive h's (which he probably pronounces haitches) on the end; something like:
"Jeep-rohhhhhhhhhhh".
yup, as a northerner I love my h’s. I do say it as the individual letters but combined with the way I pronounce them it merges into a weird hybrid. If I spoke like a southerner I’d say “gee-pee-are-oh” instead of my “geeheepeh-arh-ohhh”