How do you pronounce Porsche?

How do you pronounce Porsche?

Poll: How do you pronounce Porsche?

Total Members Polled: 121

Original German pronunciation: 31%
Porsh: 64%
Other: 4%
Author
Discussion

DOCG

Original Poster:

603 posts

60 months

Thursday 29th August
quotequote all
?

Buster73

5,161 posts

159 months

Thursday 29th August
quotequote all
Porsh, and I’m well,aware it’s wrong but can’t stop myself.

cerb4.5lee

32,773 posts

186 months

Thursday 29th August
quotequote all
Buster73 said:
Porsh, and I’m well,aware it’s wrong but can’t stop myself.
I'm Porsh too. However I'm not that posh to be fair though! hehe

If you're posh then you tend to say Porsha from what I've observed.

Heathwood

2,730 posts

208 months

Thursday 29th August
quotequote all
Definitely Porsh. I feel a tit saying Porsha.

964Cup

1,516 posts

243 months

Thursday 29th August
quotequote all
I'm German, so I don't really have a choice.

RDMcG

19,450 posts

213 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
Never really thought about it but basically Pawshah.

NDA

22,180 posts

231 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
Heathwood said:
Definitely Porsh. I feel a tit saying Porsha.
Same.

mark-3bw80

74 posts

24 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
Porsh and not Porsha, that feels snooty and I'm not snooty.

TownIdiot

1,062 posts

5 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
So should we be saying
Porsha neun elf?
Or
Neun eins eins?

Megaflow

9,811 posts

231 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
NDA said:
Heathwood said:
Definitely Porsh. I feel a tit saying Porsha.
Same.
Yep.

Hoofy

77,377 posts

288 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
Depends. At a Porsche meet, the German way. In general conversation, the British way (but not the London way).

FriedMarsBar

306 posts

38 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
Heathwood said:
Definitely Porsh. I feel a tit saying Porsha.
Ditto

Filibuster

3,279 posts

221 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
Heathwood said:
Definitely Porsh. I feel a tit saying Porsha.
Yes, because it isch Porsche wink

Being german speaking and in Switzerland, I pronounce it correctly.
When speaking english, I either say "Porsh" or deliberately say it in german "Porsche".

I find it odd too if an english speaker affected pronounce it "Porsheahhhhhh" like Joey in Friends biggrin

Also have a look here:

https://www.porsche.com/stories/culture/how-to-pro...

eyebeebe

3,128 posts

239 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
Filibuster said:
Yes, because it isch Porsche wink

Being german speaking and in Switzerland, I pronounce it correctly.
When speaking english, I either say "Porsh" or deliberately say it in german "Porsche".

I find it odd too if an english speaker affected pronounce it "Porsheahhhhhh" like Joey in Friends biggrin

Also have a look here:

https://www.porsche.com/stories/culture/how-to-pro...
No idea about the Friends reference, but I do the same living in Switzerland too.

Neil1323bolts

1,141 posts

112 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
It’s definitely not Porsha , she’s a 90’s porn star

Super Sonic

6,845 posts

60 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
On a similar theme, how do you pronounce BMW?

mep59

64 posts

123 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
eyebeebe said:
No idea about the Friends reference, but I do the same living in Switzerland too.
One more in Switzerland, though in fFrench for me, so ‘porsh’ …

the-norseman

13,195 posts

177 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
Buster73 said:
Porsh, and I’m well,aware it’s wrong but can’t stop myself.
Same, when I had my 981 I tried to start saying Porsha but sounded like a prat.

Grantstown

1,062 posts

93 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
I think Brits are conditioned to feel uncomfortable when trying to use foreign languages. Personally I don’t think there’s any shame in saying it the German way, but equally I’m not against hearing it said in the international way.

the-norseman

13,195 posts

177 months

Friday 30th August
quotequote all
Grantstown said:
I think Brits are conditioned to feel uncomfortable when trying to use foreign languages. Personally I don’t think there’s any shame in saying it the German way, but equally I’m not against hearing it said in the international way.
I'm working class british, didn't do well in English at school, well I passed with a C. I speak broken Italian.

But I felt/sounded a right wally saying Porsha instead of Porsh.