Pronounciation of "Waring"

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

Help Support :

whirlpolf

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 27, 2007
Messages
450
hello,

I had just come across these vintage blender videos on youtube, but the guy says "Wearing".
Before this, it never occured to me other than "Waring" (like in "war").
I searched some dictionary sites and they have both ways "WEARing" and "WORing".
So is it like "wear and tear /warehouse" or like "warning /warcraft" ?

Thanks.
 
Immer wie "wearing" ausgeprägt.

Es gibt "warring" auf englisch (z.B. two nations warring with each other), aber mit zwei "r's". Es gibt kein englisches Wort "waring" (ein r), aber Waring ist der Familiename des Erfinders (Dirigent Fred Waring).
 
Fred Waring, the orchcestra leader invented the "Waring&

But what has an orchestra leader have to do with kitchen appliances? What's the story? I am more than amazed.
 
Based on a wikipedia search:

 

"In the 1930s, inventor Frederick Jacob Osius went to Waring for financial backing for an electric blender he had patented. The Osius patent (#2,109,501) was filed March 13, 1937 and awarded March 1, 1938.<sup id="cite_ref-6" class="reference"><span>[</span>7<span>]</span></sup> Some $25,000 later, the Waring-owned Miracle Mixer was introduced to the public at the National Restaurant Show in Chicago retailing for $29.75. In 1938, Fred Waring renamed his Miracle Mixer Corporation as the Waring Corporation, and the mixer's name was changed to the Waring Blendor (the "o" in blendor giving it a slight distinction from "blender)."
 
There was a 1940s band and vocal group called "Fred Waring and the Pennsylvanians". I am too young to have remembered them when they actually were in business, but I remember owning an album of Christmas songs (variety mix) and one of them was performed by "Fred Waring and the Pennsylvanians". At any rate, Fred Waring also invented--or owned the patents to-- the Waring blendor. The article below discusses his music as well as the blendor.

 

auch auf deutsch:  http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_Waring

[this post was last edited: 6/26/2011-18:26]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_Waring
 
here is a Fred Waring and the Pennsylvanians Christmas song



 

Clearly, this is "popular" rather than traditional or sacred Christmas music, but songs like these made their way into Christmas variety albums that people might play while hosting a holiday-themed party during December. A note about US society that may seem odd to Europeans: people often entertain at "holiday parties" (complete with Christmas decorations, Christmas food specialties, and Christmas music) on the first, second, third, and sometimes fourth weekends of Advent (more common on the 4th weekend if it is a full week before Christmas, less common if it is shortly before Christmas). The tree is up and decorated. Having been a guest in European homes in early December, normally there are no Christmas decorations until Christmas Eve. One might see an Advent wreath, or possibly some green decorations (poinsettia, holly, etc.) but no tree or actual Christmas decorations until shortly before Christmas.

 

This is in keeping with the tradition of Advent being a pentitential time, when lavish celebrations are inappropriate until Christmas, even among people who do not attend church and who are not particularly religious. Meanwhile, in the USA, you see nearly everyone, whether religious or not, participating in holiday parties (the "office" party and usually friends having parties, typically on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays). Liturgically, mainly Catholics, Anglicans, and mainstream Protestants (Methodist, Lutheran, Presbyterian) observe Advent at church, whereas nondenominational and evangelical Christians barely known what Advent is. But it doesn't matter: nearly everyone attends a holiday party or two.

 

Churches that observe Advent here taking varying approaches to how strictly they observe Advent. Most Catholic and Anglican churches, for example, would not host any "Christmas concerts" (the idea being that if you want to hear Christmas carols, you can come to Christmas Eve services and hear them). More common would be musical presentations that are loosely related to Christmas (e.g. Handel's Messiah) but not "Christmas per se". Another example would be the "Ceremony of Lessons and Carols" in some Anglican churches: the carols relate to Advent more than to Christmas, and the Bible readings are likewise Advent-related. On the other hand, I've attended a Christmas concert at a local Presbyterian church which was fully decorated for Christmas two weeks early and Christmas carols were sung. I've also sung in a Messiah concert in a Methodist church in early December which was already fully decorated for Christmas, three weeks early.
 
Fred Waring video

A Christmas television program from the 1950s. (there is a bonus ad for General Electric, though Filter Flo isn't mentioned).

 

What I recall from that one album I owned (with the single Fred Waring/Pennsylvanians Christmas song) was that his style was rather dated, syrupy, and "ersatz". The video linked below did nothing to change my opinion. B-O-R-I-N-G.

 
Fred Waring was the Lawrence Welk/Mitch Miller/Bert Kaempfert/Ray Coniff of his time. Not the hookiest stuff.

The blenders were pretty bulletproof. They should be. $30 in 1938 is $460 today.
 
No need to add to what's already been said about Fred Waring's involvement with the Blendor.

 

When I was younger and collected 78 RPM records (back when thrift stores sold them for a dime each) I remember passing over anything by Waring/Pennsylvanians because I found him so boring.  He couldn't compare to the likes of Paul Whiteman, Isham Jones, Nat Shilkret or even Hal Kemp.
 
I saw Fred Waring and the Pennsylvanians live about 1970 or so, but I was too young to have retained much of it. By that point in his career a lot of the show was played for laughs. I loved his version of "The Night Before Christmas" and still have that album.

It might help non-English speakers to know that Waring rhymes with Daring.
 
I enjoyed the Fred Waring christmas songs played on the links!Very good-Folks had TALENT in those days-they could REALLY sing-not Moan,Scream,or hollar the song as done today.This would be a nice TV show to see.and wonder how many Hi-fis in that time were playing the Waring albums.The link for the Waring blenders doesn't work.
 
phonetics

Because a is followed by a single consonant (r) in "Waring", the a would take the "long a" sound, rhyming with "daring". It also rhymes with "wearing", but I think that "wearing" is an irregular exception, because it takes a "long a" sound rather than the regularly expected "long e" sound, which would rhyme with "fearing".

Normally, in an English diphthong (two adjacent vowels), "<span style="text-decoration: underline;">when two vowels go walking, the first one does the talking</span>"---a rhyme I was taught in first year of elementary school, age six. "Nearing" and "fearing" take the "long e" sound, which follows the phonetics rules. "Wearing" with the "long a" sound is an exception, so <span style="text-decoration: underline;">supersuds</span> is correct in advising a rhyme with "daring", which "follows the rules", since only one consonant after the a makes that a "long".
 
Correct...

Except that in the 70s, I think, I remember some skit or program with an oriental chef calling it the Walling Blendor. I heard many friends imitating the pronunciation, but I cannot remember where it came from. Maybe something from SNL?

A friend's grandmother had a apartment in NYC and the electricity was Direct Current, like the subways and elevators. She had a bisexual Waring Blendor that ran on dc or ac. He remembers this because it was taken along on trips out to the place on Long Island where the electricity was alternating current.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top