Base or Bass?

Okay

when speaking of speakers whats the correct pronuncation , Base as in baseball or Bass in the fish!

I’ve always pronounced it base even though it was spelled bass…inquiring minds want to know!!. [banghead]

In every use of the word that I can remember the ‘base’ pronunciation has been used.

I think it just one of those quirks of the English language. Besides, I don’t want any fish in my speakers - after a while they will start to smell![+o(][(-D]

Dave

I’ve always pronounced it as if it were ‘base’ but I’m far from being a linguistic expert in these matters –

Perhaps there are some audiophiles who will set us both in our place.

Base is the English spelling, while bass is the euro-musical spelling:

I recall a little balance knob on my parents’ ancient big-tube radio (the thing that looked like a Gothic cathedral.) It was labeled Base at one end and Treble at the other.

On the other hand, the male singing voice with the lowest range has always been described as Bass, or, if of operatic quality, Basso Profundo.

I believe most of us are Anglophones…

Chuck (Music lover modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)

It’s spelled like the singer, pronounced like that thingy you slide into playing baseball.

Tom [:D]

Spelled Bass…pronounced Base…

This is a lot like words such as “colour”, “honour” and “neighbourhood”, which my American friends always seem to spell incorrectly. Fortunately, in face-to-face conversations, most seem able to pronounce these words properly, allowing us Can-knuckleheads to understand them easily. [swg][(-D][(-D][(-D]

Wayne

Bass is a fish. {like a B in front of a crude donkey}

Base {like in baseball} is what music calls it…regardless how it’s spelled in Europe, Bass.

We in America call it color, the CAnadians call it Colour, yet it means the same thing. No one ever said that English is a great easy language to learn!

[8-|]

There are lots of words that are spelled the same but mean something different. Us Canadians pronounce the letter Z as Zed, not Zee like you Americans. You dudes are weird.[:P]

I used to be a car audio enthusiast and heard both pronunciations. Earl…

On the controls for my computors speakers it is spelled Bass. I have always known the spelling as Bass. I have always pronounced it as Base.

As a musician AND bass trombonist, it’s always been pronounced “bāss” (long “a”)…i.e. unless you’re fishing around for a compliment; then it would be pronounced “bass” (short “a”). [:o)]

Tom

In musical terms, bass and base are pronounced the same but mean different things.

It is English, but influenced by the term “basso”. Seems most terminology used on sheet music is Italian (or Latin), so that is where the influence comes from.

I do remember the principal in high school reading an announcement where the school band needed a bass player. He pronounced it as if it were a fish.

I have always heard bass pronounced like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGUP8oc9Bgs

Never as the fish. However you could be singing bass:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WC6EbRQmJ0

Spelled bass but pronounced “base” like the singer, or musical instrument…think bass guitar.

And to add a new wrinkle to the discussion, the musical term basso (which has been mentioned a couple of times now) is actually pronounced “boss-oh”, as in bosso profundo or deep bass; NOT to be confused with a fish found at the very bottom of the lake.

Tom

All your bass are belong to us.

Someone set us up the bomb!

Dave Nelson

They both sound the same to me in my neck of the woods anyway.

Bass( Fender Electric) and Base (as in 1st) = bayss.

Bass - the fish sounds, well, different to those two.

So long.

Dusty.

And I remember an exchange of dialogue from the first act of Shakespeare King Lear: character complaining about names applied to him: “Why base? Wherefore bastard?”

The professor explained that the character was confusing two words which sounded alike but were actually quite different. “Base” could apply to social standing in the renaissance class system of royal- noble- commoner, or could refer to inner quality. “Bastard” referred only to legitimacy of parentage and inheritance rights. In Elizabethen times. Now usually used as a term of personal low character.

In renaissance society,a royal or noble’s following and hangers-on were known as his train. And THAT’s what this has to do with trains, in case you were wondering.

Two pages of replies. Dictionary, anyone?

bass = base