RE: Which Do You Hear
May 17, 2018 at 8:40 am
(This post was last modified: May 17, 2018 at 8:51 am by Edwardo Piet.)
How can you hear Yanny?!?!?! Those two words are completely different.
WHATTTTTTT 47% hear Yanny? WTF but again, those words sound nothing like each other wtf.
So 47% of people always thought Laurel and Hardy were Yanny and Hardy? WTF lol. It makes no sense at all the pronunciation is completely different!
Why do we never get people talking of the famous comedy duo Yanny and Hardy then?
EDIT: LOL in that video he said the soundwaves were similar when they looked very different lol. They sound different and look different. Makes no sense. Some people may be primed to hear Yanny but the actual sound is clearly Laurel and those two words are both spelled and pronounced completely differently.
It's like saying "Do you hear Yogurt or cabbage?" lol.
One starts and ends in a "y" sound the other starts and ends in an "l" sound. One has a strong "n" sound in it the other does not. It's not even close to being similar in pronunciation. What a joke.
EDIT 2: WTF the pitch being brought down thing is weird because this suggests he's not really saying Yanny or Laurel. If he's really saying Laurel then that sounds nothing like Yanny. This is why it's Laurel and Hardy and not Yanny and Hardy.
EDIT 3: Oh my ears are accurate then. It's Laurel.
WHATTTTTTT 47% hear Yanny? WTF but again, those words sound nothing like each other wtf.
So 47% of people always thought Laurel and Hardy were Yanny and Hardy? WTF lol. It makes no sense at all the pronunciation is completely different!
Why do we never get people talking of the famous comedy duo Yanny and Hardy then?
EDIT: LOL in that video he said the soundwaves were similar when they looked very different lol. They sound different and look different. Makes no sense. Some people may be primed to hear Yanny but the actual sound is clearly Laurel and those two words are both spelled and pronounced completely differently.
It's like saying "Do you hear Yogurt or cabbage?" lol.
One starts and ends in a "y" sound the other starts and ends in an "l" sound. One has a strong "n" sound in it the other does not. It's not even close to being similar in pronunciation. What a joke.
EDIT 2: WTF the pitch being brought down thing is weird because this suggests he's not really saying Yanny or Laurel. If he's really saying Laurel then that sounds nothing like Yanny. This is why it's Laurel and Hardy and not Yanny and Hardy.
EDIT 3: Oh my ears are accurate then. It's Laurel.