I have never heard it pronounced as two words anywhere (as you have written it it would be phonetically one word ending in k and a second beginning with k) if you pronounce it phonetically exactly as it is written you get the typical non-US pronunciation.
On 3 Oct, 2009, at 04:21, Jon wrote:
I stand corrected. It was nick-kon Sent from Olywa On Oct 2, 2009, at 7:57 PM, Jim Brick <jim@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:My British friends pronounce it Nick-Kon. On Oct 2, 2009, at 7:36 PM, Jon wrote:I did the tax return for a British photographer and he pronounced it "knee-kon"--- Rollei List - Post to rollei_list@xxxxxxxxxxxxx- Subscribe at rollei_list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with 'subscribe'in the subject field OR by logging into www.freelists.org- Unsubscribe at rollei_list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with'unsubscribe' in the subject field OR by logging into www.freelists.org- Online, searchable archives are available at //www.freelists.org/archives/rollei_list--- Rollei List - Post to rollei_list@xxxxxxxxxxxxx- Subscribe at rollei_list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with 'subscribe'in the subject field OR by logging into www.freelists.org- Unsubscribe at rollei_list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with'unsubscribe' in the subject field OR by logging into www.freelists.org- Online, searchable archives are available at //www.freelists.org/archives/rollei_list
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