Yanny
I don’t. I say either.
Whichever one you say, I say the other one.
Eye-ver
Growing up, I self-taught myself to pronounce this word as “Ee-ther”. Then I went to a private teacher and learned that the correct English pronunciation is “Eye-ther”. Then I also came to know that the word can be pronounced in both way regarding different accents. Then I stopped caring which pronunciation I was using while speaking. Most of the time, I say “Eye-ther”. I utter the later one barely.
eye-ther
Probably eye-ther, but eee-ther on random occasion
Either works, really.
Neither
Best answer to the question here. Neither either of either is right (or wrong).
Neither. I say either.
Ironically, either of them depending on the situation. Sometimes I even express the concept that I am indifferent to the choice between two things or happy with both of them by saying “ee-ther, eye-ther”
I definitely use them both together more often than just one. Like you, to express indifference to a choice.
I don’t tend to do that with neither though 🤔 and now I’m thinking too hard, I don’t know which I tend to go with.
In my head I pronounce it as “either”, but out loud I pronounce it like “either”
Both. Context-dependant.
Eye-ther mostly, but like with many words I’ll alternate between pronunciations! (You still won’t catch me pronouncing “decals” like dee-cals though!)
I can’t tell if maybe you’re joking, but is there another way to pronounce decal? I could in theory imagine someone saying it like “dick-al” but that seems unlikely.
“Deckles”, rhyming with “speckles”.
if you don’t mind me asking, what country are you from? I’ve heard people from the us say ee-ther and dee-cals
Weird, I didn’t know people pronounced it dye-cals /s
either