I must admit that I could not recollect anything about him until I saw his ITF profile. So is the "gh" the same as the one in Waugh? Or like the one in "laugh"?
I did get a nasty shock when I first heard the way Loughborough is supposed to be pronounced.
I must admit that I could not recollect anything about him until I saw his ITF profile. So is the "gh" the same as the one in Waugh? Or like the one in "laugh"?
"Kenna" (or possibly "kennaw"), if you're English, so yes, along the lines of the "gh" in "Waugh", but "Ken-yak", if you're Manx, it being a Manx surname & therefore part of the Gaelic family of languages.
-- Edited by Stircrazy on Friday 11th of October 2013 10:50:37 AM
I must admit that I could not recollect anything about him until I saw his ITF profile. So is the "gh" the same as the one in Waugh? Or like the one in "laugh"?
"Kenna" (or possibly "kennaw"), if you're English, so yes, along the lines of the "gh" in "Waugh", but "Ken-yak", if you're Manx, it being a Manx surname & therefore part of the Gaelic family of languages.
-- Edited by Stircrazy on Friday 11th of October 2013 10:50:37 AM
Yep. Though the pro cyclist Peter Kennaugh always claims its more like Ken-Yick