Do these things exist?
Apr. 5th, 2010 09:55 pmOne: is it possible to buy someone vouchers that they can use to buy tickets for any concert? Things got a bit muddled and I didn't manage to buy my student a wedding present. I want to get something appropriate (given that she is, in fact, my student), but that she will enjoy, and I know she's a big rock fan, but I have no idea what her tastes are specifically. So I'd like to be able to give her a certain value of concert tickets, but let her choose which gig to go to. Sort of like iTunes vouchers, but for live music? Ideally it would be physical vouchers I could send her in a nice envelope, not just a code to type into a website, cos that would make it more like a wedding present.
Two: is there a gazetteer or something similar that tells announcers and news reporters how to pronounce place-names? Even small obscure villages? Was travelling home the slow way across country today, and I noticed that there are an awful lot of names that even a fluent native speaker has no hope of guessing how to pronounce, especially if they're in a different region from where that person is familiar with.
(As you can probably deduce from this, I'm home. Work starts tomorrow, but I do feel I've had a good break, two weekends and an intervening week really helps even when it's hectic.)
Two: is there a gazetteer or something similar that tells announcers and news reporters how to pronounce place-names? Even small obscure villages? Was travelling home the slow way across country today, and I noticed that there are an awful lot of names that even a fluent native speaker has no hope of guessing how to pronounce, especially if they're in a different region from where that person is familiar with.
(As you can probably deduce from this, I'm home. Work starts tomorrow, but I do feel I've had a good break, two weekends and an intervening week really helps even when it's hectic.)
(no subject)
Date: 2010-04-06 03:45 pm (UTC)http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A19773499