Pronunciations of SQL Derived Database Names and Terms
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@RojoLoco said in What is a Database Management System:
@scottalanmiller said in What is a Database Management System:
@RojoLoco said in What is a Database Management System:
SQL is pronounced "sequel", IDGAF what you put before or after it. Just like SMPTE is pronounced "simptee".
So you pronounce PostgreSQL as "postgresequel?"
I don't pronounce that one since it is a crappy acronym.
@RojoLoco said in What is a Database Management System:
@scottalanmiller said in What is a Database Management System:
@RojoLoco said in What is a Database Management System:
SQL is pronounced "sequel", IDGAF what you put before or after it. Just like SMPTE is pronounced "simptee".
So you pronounce PostgreSQL as "postgresequel?"
I don't pronounce that one since it is a crappy acronym.
It's only crappy if you try to pronounce it incorrectly
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@Dashrender said in What is a Database Management System:
@JaredBusch said in What is a Database Management System:
@scottalanmiller said in What is a Database Management System:
MySQL is proncounced "My S-Q-L", never "My Sequel." This is a commercial product with an official pronunciation.
Official or not, it has been MySequel to most for a long ass time.
I was thinking the same thing. Is it Data or Data?
It's not, because it is a proper name.
Or as they say in Star Trek, "One is its name, one is not."
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@scottalanmiller said in What is a Database Management System:
It's only crappy if you try to pronounce it incorrectly
LOL - it's crappy anyway you try to pronounce it.
Post Gres Q L - yeah that just rolls off the tongue. -
@RojoLoco said in What is a Database Management System:
@scottalanmiller said in What is a Database Management System:
Quick Note on Pronunciation:
SQL is a language developed by IBM and is pronounced like the English word "sequel." It is, in fact, an abbreviation of that word. It's original name was actually SEQUEL but due to copyright issues, it was changed to SQL.
MS SQL Server is pronounced MS "sequel" Server. Never spell it out.
MySQL is proncounced "My S-Q-L", never "My Sequel." This is a commercial product with an official pronunciation.
PostgreSQL is pronounced "Post - Gres - Q - L". It's a weird name, what can we say.
This strikes me as some total hipster BS.... "well, we're soooo Enterprise that we know the correct pronunciation....
Except that's how intentionally mispronouncing common terms and names just because the SMB likes to be "wrong to be cool" sounds. It's not hipster to be correct. It's hardly "so enterprise" to know the names of some of the industries biggest products. If anyone is being hipster, it's the new SMB people who made up a new name that they use and try to act cool by intentionally not using the actual names.
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@Dashrender said in What is a Database Management System:
@scottalanmiller said in What is a Database Management System:
It's only crappy if you try to pronounce it incorrectly
LOL - it's crappy anyway you try to pronounce it.
Post Gres Q L - yeah that just rolls off the tongue.It's because it is a joke on the name Ingress which it replaced. It was the "Post Ingress" server.
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is it marry a db or mariadb?
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"What's in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet." -
@RojoLoco said in What is a Database Management System:
PostgreSQL = "post grease-quell"? I got really fing sick of this type of elitism that tried to change the long accepted pronunciations of audio acronyms. Forgive me if my give-a-f isn't activating...
Exactly my feeling. It's extremely elitist to feel that after years or decades of a name being official, commonly known and standard to suddenly introduce new pronunciations and hold to them just for the sake of being "better" than the people who have known the name for a long time. The pronunciations above have been accepted... always. Nothing is being changed. All of the pronunciations were provided by the vendors who created the names when they were created. Any deviation from that is the elitist hipster "doing my own thing just to be better than thou" thing.
You can never call someone elitist for being accurate or just using the name that existed since day one. But saying that that is elitist would be elitist. Accuracy is never elitism. But intentional inaccuracy could be.
And saying that things like My-sequal are standard is pushing it, hard. I'd be shocked to find out that even half of people who use the product say it that way. Maybe they do, but certainly in circles I know, it's unheard of to mispronounce it in that way.
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@scottalanmiller said in What is a Database Management System:
@Dashrender said in What is a Database Management System:
@JaredBusch said in What is a Database Management System:
@scottalanmiller said in What is a Database Management System:
MySQL is proncounced "My S-Q-L", never "My Sequel." This is a commercial product with an official pronunciation.
Official or not, it has been MySequel to most for a long ass time.
I was thinking the same thing. Is it Data or Data?
It's not, because it is a proper name.
Or as they say in Star Trek, "One is its name, one is not."
Data is plural
Datum is singular -
This is literally the first time I've ever heard someone suggest that the mispronunciations of any of these words was the "more common". That mispronunciations happen often is without question the case. But I'm totally shocked by the feeling that the new made up pronunciations are the more common today - I had no idea that some people felt this way. The use of those has been so uncommon over the decades that I had no idea that any area had adopted them enough to not be the occasional "oh they don't use it and didn't know" pronunciation. But if you think the original ones went away, they never did and lots of people would be shocked to find out that people think that the original names are now weird and unused.
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It's not like the most casual investigation of these products doesn't turn up the pronunciations. The moment anyone says "how do you pronounce that" anyone who doesn't know would be able to find it in seconds.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MySQL
This is a product that has been around for 22 years. It was only a few years ago (less than ten) that I heard My-sequel for the first time. And I'm not sure if I've ever heard it outside of the SW community.
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http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/7231/how-is-sql-pronounced
It goes back and forth, but this says it all:
"According to the Computer Contradictionary (Stan Kelly-Bootle, MIT Press, 1995), "those pronouncing SQL as \ess-kew-ell\ rather than \sequel\ are instantly revealed as charlatans incapable of confuting the six and seventy jarring normal forms. Those who have really suffered are allowed to say \squeal\ "."
Bottom line is they are both correct, ess kew ell for unix mafks, sequel for those with a Windows background. Both those groups of people exist, btw.
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@RojoLoco Now it all makes sense...Thats why I say Sequel!
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@RojoLoco said in What is a Database Management System:
http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/7231/how-is-sql-pronounced
It goes back and forth, but this says it all:
"According to the Computer Contradictionary (Stan Kelly-Bootle, MIT Press, 1995), "those pronouncing SQL as \ess-kew-ell\ rather than \sequel\ are instantly revealed as charlatans incapable of confuting the six and seventy jarring normal forms. Those who have really suffered are allowed to say \squeal\ "."
Sequel is the IBM name. ISO uses S-Q-L. You can make a point for either of those. Sequel is the "original and classic name". S-Q-L is the hipster "rebranding" and only refers to the ISO versions. Using either with SQL is acceptable. You have to decide if you are going for the original, official name or the later revisionist name. Since SQL is literally a shortening of the word SEQUEL it really gives things away. But that's quite unrelated to the MySQL or PostgreSQL names which are proper names today, not names of standards.
However, if you use S-Q-L instead of sequel with the language you can become inaccurate if you try to talk about it historically since the name S-Q-L only exists in any formality in the post-ISO world. And French revisionist renaming is a bit.... hipster in the truest form. It's like how RAID was later "revised" to standard for something different and... not sensible.
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SQL is no longer a product. So it doesn't have the same formality as a product name. There is no vendor making SQL any longer. That makes for a weird situation where the original vendor says one thing that it's name was and the standards body has a new name that they like to use.
If you use the full name of ISO SQL, you should always pronounce the S-Q-L, for sure.
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Thank goodness for this thread...I needed a good laugh today. Its so...detoxifying!
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@RojoLoco said in What is a Database Management System:
To me, any acronym's pronunciation is about saving time with fewer syllables or by using a pronunciation that is an actual English word. Even though the longer ess kew ell is considered to be historically original, it has more syllables than sequel, thereby making it utterly inefficient at expressing the same acronym for people whose time is valuable. Fewer syllables = I'm not spending any extra time saying what I need to say. Regardless of what anyone thinks is "standard" or "accepted", the pronunciation with fewer syllables should always win. Unless you just like hearing yourself talk.
I think that's sensible and I think in all three cases that holds up.
SQL is "sequel" which is the shorter to pronounce.
MySQL is "Myes Q L" which is easier and faster to say than "My se-quel". Syllabically it might seem shorter, but actually saying it your tongue can say it more easily - less "stops" in your mouth.
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@scottalanmiller said in What is a Database Management System:
@RojoLoco said in What is a Database Management System:
@JaredBusch said in What is a Database Management System:
@scottalanmiller said in What is a Database Management System:
MySQL is proncounced "My S-Q-L", never "My Sequel." This is a commercial product with an official pronunciation.
Official or not, it has been MySequel to most for a long ass time.
It's always been pronounced "sequel". I've literall;y never heard it any other way, and I would laugh if I did. To hell with "official".
"Always" is pushing it. For many years you would never hear that. It's a relatively recent things that more and more casual users of it have started to make their own pronunciations. If you say "MySequel" you definitely flag yourself as not being familiar with the product. People would recognize you as not being very familiar with it very quickly. Definitely something that in a job interview would raise some eyebrows. In SMB circles where DBAs and UNIX Admins are rare, you can totally get away with it. With people who really manage MySQL instances, it would come across very differently.
um, WTF with the over broad generalizing yet again?
Every where I have ever been, it has been pronounced my sequel. And , unlike you I actually talk to many, many, people and hear what they say.
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@RojoLoco said in What is a Database Management System:
Even though the longer ess kew ell is considered to be historically original, it has more syllables than sequel
Backwards on SQL. SQL was always "sequel". It's only recently that ISO SQL changed how it is pronounced for their own uses. The language family from IBM long ago is "sequel".
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@JaredBusch said in What is a Database Management System:
@scottalanmiller said in What is a Database Management System:
@RojoLoco said in What is a Database Management System:
@JaredBusch said in What is a Database Management System:
@scottalanmiller said in What is a Database Management System:
MySQL is proncounced "My S-Q-L", never "My Sequel." This is a commercial product with an official pronunciation.
Official or not, it has been MySequel to most for a long ass time.
It's always been pronounced "sequel". I've literall;y never heard it any other way, and I would laugh if I did. To hell with "official".
"Always" is pushing it. For many years you would never hear that. It's a relatively recent things that more and more casual users of it have started to make their own pronunciations. If you say "MySequel" you definitely flag yourself as not being familiar with the product. People would recognize you as not being very familiar with it very quickly. Definitely something that in a job interview would raise some eyebrows. In SMB circles where DBAs and UNIX Admins are rare, you can totally get away with it. With people who really manage MySQL instances, it would come across very differently.
um, WTF with the over broad generalizing yet again?
Every where I have ever been, it has been pronounced my sequel. And , unlike you I actually talk to many, many, people and hear what they say.
Ditto