I need your help to settle this perpetual disagreement in my home. I’m team ‘skon’ whereas my husband is team ‘skone.’
Some context, we are not native to the UK so I will humbly accept consensus.
Scone. Anyone who says scone is wrong.
Hard to disagree with that.
This thread is asking for trouble
Agreed, I think half the community will turn against me if I post my answer 🗿
At least nobody has asked which order to put the jam and cream on, there’d be carnage
Slice the scone in half.
Scone. Cream. Jam.
Anything else is a crime against humanity
I’ll bite.
It’s a “skone”. Clue is in the fact it’s spelt “scone”, ie just substitute the K for a C. It it was a skon it would be called a scon.
/thread
Skone, like phone and bone.
Skon, like shone and gone.
shone and gone
Those don’t rhyme
If it was suppose to be a skone it would be called a skone.
The town in Scotland is pronounced “Skoon”.
This is the correct answer.
Which is precisely why ‘shone’ and ‘shown’ are said the same way, of course.
Rhymes with “gone”
I’ve always said scone as in bone. My Aussie other half says skon so by default I end up saying “scone slash scon”. I count this as being billingual.
Best answer yet, esp since I imagine you have plenty of fun colloquialisms with an Aussie partner!
Ha. Thanks. Navigating those delicate variations in the shared English language (lollies for sweets, chips for crisps and yet chips are chips. I’ll never get that). Oddly my OH says pasta as in parstar compared to my pasta as in…er…Rasta. Language eh.Don’t get me started on Yoghurt as in Yowghurt.
But pasta is Italian (alright, it’s Chinese (props to Messrs. Polo)) and they pronounce it the Australian way.
Disclosure: I grew up in Australia but live here now.
I go with skon, for I am common as muck and not ashamed of it. I won’t judge you if you say skone, but I will think you’re posh.
The thing about that is everyone believes the way they don’t pronounce it is the posh way.
Where I grew up, calling it skon would get you labelled posh.
But I am common as muck. I haven’t met an H I haven’t dropped and I’m proper Bermondsey and Millwall. And it’s a “skone”. In fact the only people who call it a “skon” in my experience in deepest darkest Saaaaaaaf Laaaaaaandaaan are posh cnuts.
Spock has a cat. Your argument is invalid.
Hmm, I’m willing to entertain your evidence but let’s do an experiment.
“Hew mate, giz a skon”
“Greetings good sir, would you mind if I partake in one of your delightful skones?”
Yeah, nah, one of these is deffo posher than the other 😉
“alright geez, giz a skone”
“Good evening my good man. My name is Lord Ponsonby Smythe Smythe Smythe. Could I trouble you for one of those skons?”
Works both ways.
Edit: my friend, who I am currently drinking pints with, says “skon is more northern but posh and scone is more estuary”.
And he’s an expert and a cunt (his own description of himself).
I see we shall have to agree to disagree*, that second one makes no sense! :D
* but we’ll do it in a civil manner, 'cos this is a nice place
By the power of editing clarification I shall smight thee in twain.
But for the record this is all cracking fun.
Lol your friend is incorrect but I do appreciate his confidence (and your underhand ways)
Edinburgh-er here - skon for the cake thing, skoon for the town. Skown never.
Normally when you say ‘skoon’ you’re referring to the ‘stone of scone’, our big lump of magical red sandstone, which is obviously completely unlike any other bit of rock you might find on your travels. Used to be what the kings/queens of Scotland were crowned upon until the English stole it for theirs to sit on; if you say it that way, we’ll have to assume you’re interested in a debate about the role and future of the monarchy and will engage you.
For me, I pronounce it as cone with an s at the start. Whereas my parents pronounce it as con with an s at the start.
Scone makes more sense then scon, purely by spelling, if it was scon then it would be spelt “scon”.
Skon, for me.
Although if you’re talking about the Palace in Perthshire, then it’s Skoon.
Good shout, wouldn’t want to embarrass myself when I make my way out there after the new museum opens.
That’s easy. I pronounce it correctly.
Scone rhymes with gone, much to the annoyanve of my partner who rhymes it with stone.
Scone rhymes with stone
I’m a commoner, so it’s Scon for me! As humans we tend to cut out words and letters due to laziness, or to put it positively, to save time 😂.
Scon to rhyme with gone is how posh people say it - the Queen said it that way herself!
Technically neither is “correct” (as if a pronunciation by native speakers could be in any way wrong) as it’s originally a Scots word, and in Scots it’s pronounced [skɔn] so that it rhymes with “lawn”
Easy, it’s Skone until you eat it, then it’s Skon.