I think foy-yar is a southern peculiarity specific to the Florida panhandle and gulf coast - certainly anyone with the aristocratic drawl of an upper Georgian - Savannah and the like - accent would fall over themselves to pronounce French with affective flourish.Timminz wrote:While the Americans may have bastardized a few English words, they've totally destroyed the French words they've taken for themselves. For example: foyer.
I've also never heard anyone in California pronounce foyer as anything other than foy-yay.
That said, realizing that 90% of Britons who have been to the U.S. have never been outside of New York City, Miami and the greater Orlando area, many of these stereotypes framed by the worldliness a white-as-paper Briton declares he's earned after spending 4 days in an amusement park often seem to be a source of humour for Americans here on the coast. Like if I went to the Tower of London and came back to announce "the British wear elaborate, crimson costumes, live in gigantic stone fortresses and keep ravens as pets."



