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Gemsbok or Hemsbok

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16 December 2010, 04:46
vapodog
Gemsbok or Hemsbok
I was recently a guest in the home of a man in New Mexico and he's originally from RSA (capetown) and were having a great chat about Africa when I mentioned gemsbok.....pronounced Gems Bock....gem like in Saddan & Gem orrah

He politely corrected me and said it was pronounced Hemsbok....(as in pants hem)...

Since he is from Africa I changed and now say hemsbok.....

Can anyone confirm the correct pronunciation...?


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16 December 2010, 04:53
Jriley
When I was in Namibia everyone said "Hemsbok." But, I still say "Gemsbok." Hope that helps! Smiler
16 December 2010, 05:02
johnfox
Where I hunted in Namibia they were Oryx.. Smiler
16 December 2010, 05:12
vapodog
quote:
Originally posted by johnfox:
Where I hunted in Namibia they were Oryx.. Smiler
Smiler


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"Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery."
Winston Churchill
16 December 2010, 05:16
safari-lawyer
Tomato . . . tomato. Wait, they both spell tomato. I think I messed up.

Potato . . . potato? Damn!

Seriously, neither you nor your friend are wrong or right, it's just geographically and culturally influenced linguistics and phonetics. German v. Dutch v. English influences I'd suspect.


Will J. Parks, III
16 December 2010, 05:19
rxgremlin
In Afrikaans, a G is pronounced like an H.
However when I have spoken to PHs from S. Africa they have looked at me strangely when I said "Hemsbok" instead of "Gemsbok". Maybe they found it a little weird for an American pronounce it that way but I am sure that Afrikaners say "Hemsbok"
16 December 2010, 05:23
Biebs
Same with Nyala. Some say "N-yala" and others "Nyala".
16 December 2010, 06:07
BNagel
Gemsbok or Hemsbok?

We in America avoid sounds many other world languages employ. One of those is the rolled "r" familiar to Spanish hearers / speakers. Another is the gutteral sound familiar to Arabic/Hebrew/German/Dutch and Afrikaans speakers. It is rendered variously, "ch" in Yiddish, Scottish brogue, letters other than Roman (English) are used for many others. However, in Afrikaans "g" is used for the gutteral and "gh" for a hard G in loan words such as "ghitar" and "gholf".

For those who find themselves unable to render the gutteral, "Hemsbok" is what comes out, but you really need the phlegmy sound -- like Ahmed the Dead Terrorist uses.


_______________________


16 December 2010, 06:38
Tim Carney
BNagel is right on. Gemsbok is an Afrikaans word and only wussy English speakers, including those in South Africa and Namibia, pronounce it either "gems bok" (as in a precious stone gem) or "Hemsbok" without the guttural.

Best of the Season
16 December 2010, 07:01
SBT
Will, you are a funny boy!


"There are worse memorials to a life well-lived than a pair of elephant tusks." Robert Ruark
16 December 2010, 10:00
Idaho Sharpshooter
PH's in both Zimbabwe (CM Safaris with Myles) and RSA (ABS with Reon) said hemsbuck when I hunted with them.

So, I do too...

In six to eight weeks mine will be headed stateside.

Rich
16 December 2010, 10:36
Scriptus
The Afrikaans "g" is a gutteral g, almost as though the speaker has a touch of flem in the throat. Everyone is capable of hacking. Give it a try and maybe next time you suprise your PH. As an aside, what I do find amusing, is watching a DVD with an obviously Afrikaans PH trying to talk with an American accent. Geez, ssooo phoney. Cool

Years back, I was hunting with a client from Dallas [Tx], early morning found us on a hillside in the cold shade, glassing the opposite hillside for kudu or bushbuck. My client, after a time whispered,"What's standing next to the tank?" "TANK?" I glassed the whole hillside looking for a tank. Was it a Grant, a Churchhill, a T-55, an Oliphant, a 90mm Noddycar, a grain tank? I gave up trying to see a tank when my eyes started watering from the strain. "Where do you see a tank?" It turned out to be a stock dam, a small bulldozed pond for the retaining of rain water. bewildered Cool


SUSTAINABLY HUNTING THE BLUE PLANET!
"Political language is designed to make lies sound truthful, murder respectable and to give an appearence of solidity to pure wind." Dr J A du Plessis






16 December 2010, 12:38
KMG Hunting Safaris
This is the first time that I have ever heard of a "Hemsbok"
Its pronounced Gemsbuck,as its spelt.

Maybe if you are from Mexico, its like "Jalepeno"

But never heard of a Hemsbok, would like to get myself one of them though... Smiler


Marius Goosen
KMG Hunting Safaris
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16 December 2010, 13:34
Nakihunter
The guttural H sound is sometimes spelt as Kh or even Qh in some languages. The Spanish Jalapeno is not so guttural & more like a normal Ha sound.

I have noticed that many Americans and even Kiwis and Australians seem to find it difficult to pronounce names of other languages correctly or even close. On the other hand I have been surprised by Germans who were pretty good at pronouncing my name correctly the first time.


"When the wind stops....start rowing. When the wind starts, get the sail up quick."
16 December 2010, 13:48
johnfox
Adding to my earlier post re my Namibian PH referring to oryx instead of gemsbok, we also hunted springbuck not springbok.
Clearly it's a regional thing.
16 December 2010, 13:54
shakari
Cultural rather than regional.

Those from an Afrikaans bachground will usually use hemsbok and springbok whereas those from a British (etc) background will use gemsbuck and springbuck etc.






16 December 2010, 16:11
Karl S
quote:
Those from an Afrikaans bachground will usually use hemsbok and springbok whereas those from a British (etc) background will use gemsbuck and springbuck etc.


Simply not true Steve, I have NEVER heard ANY local (Boer, Brit or German background) use the Hemsbok pronounciation.
All know how to pronounce a G, it may sound like a H to Americans, but no one actually pronounce it that way. This is one of the reasons I prefer to say oryx, as I hate to start the G pronounciation lesson, with 90% fail rate...


Karl Stumpfe
Ndumo Hunting Safaris www.huntingsafaris.net
karl@huntingsafaris.net
P.O. Box 1667, Katima Mulilo, Namibia
Cell: +264 81 1285 416
Fax: +264 61 254 328
Sat. phone: +88 163 166 9264
16 December 2010, 16:19
shakari
Karl,

I've got a fair number of friends who have Afrikaans as their first language and I doubt any of them would usually use the G pronuncuation and I doubt any of my friends who have English as a first language, would usually use the H pronunciation.

'Praps we should just settle on oryx. Wink






16 December 2010, 19:00
Karl S
quote:
Originally posted by shakari:
.......would usually use the H pronunciation.



Steve, but that's my point, there simply is not a H pronunctiation. To the untrained ear, an Afrikaans G and an H may sound simmilar, but to someone with at least the basics of Afrikaans under the knee, it sounds preposterous to say Hemsbok. In fact, where I grew up, it sounded more like gêsbok (with an almost silent m, maybe even sounding like a n, and the e drawn out.)


Karl Stumpfe
Ndumo Hunting Safaris www.huntingsafaris.net
karl@huntingsafaris.net
P.O. Box 1667, Katima Mulilo, Namibia
Cell: +264 81 1285 416
Fax: +264 61 254 328
Sat. phone: +88 163 166 9264
16 December 2010, 19:13
KMG Hunting Safaris
I agree with Karl,
I've been hunting all my life, and have never heard locals nor foreigners pronounce or spell it Hemsbok.

Springbuck vs Springbok , well a buck in Afrikaans is bok, so I think its only the Afrikaans translation to the English name.


Marius Goosen
KMG Hunting Safaris
Cell, Whats App, Signal +27 828205387
E-mail: info@huntsafaris.co.za
Website: www.huntsafaris.co.za
Check us out on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kmghuntingsafaris
Instagram: @kmg_hunting_safaris

16 December 2010, 19:23
Scriptus
Much ado about nothing. [sorry Bill] JUST SHOOT THE DAMN THING! The one second left with the forty inch pins. Big Grin Cool


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16 December 2010, 19:26
Fjold
It's probably a regional accent. It's like talking to a Southerner and a Bostonian at the same time. It doesn't sound like the same language.


Frank



"I don't know what there is about buffalo that frightens me so.....He looks like he hates you personally. He looks like you owe him money."
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16 December 2010, 19:28
ddrhook
this is worse than trying to figure out what a brit is saying Big Grin sofa
a friend of mine in Nairobi was saying poouuie I ask him three time what he mean he finally got fustrated and spelled it. he was saying PIE. as in he wanted to get a slice of pooouuie animal
16 December 2010, 21:05
J D
This is to deep for me. All I know is that they did not care what I called them , they just died when I shot them and the ph added the trophy fee to the list.

JD


DRSS
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17 December 2010, 03:10
Tracker49
Some Americans haven't figured out that there is no letter E in corn or acorn. They say akern when describing the things that fall from Oak Trees!
17 December 2010, 08:29
Michael Robinson
Kalagari Horyx.


Mike

Wilderness is my cathedral, and hunting is my prayer.
17 December 2010, 08:45
johnfox
quote:
Originally posted by Tracker49:
Some Americans haven't figured out that there is no letter E in corn or acorn. They say akern when describing the things that fall from Oak Trees!


And some say Hornaday... Big Grin
17 December 2010, 14:28
tendrams
It is a bit strange, this pronunciation business.....

Pronouncing the "G" is wrong, pronouncing the H without the "CHHGGG" in the back of the throat is wrong, but trying to pronounce it like you are fluent in Afrikaans makes a native English speaker feel silly. It's a bit like pronouncing "springbok" with the slightly trilled "r" and the "o" coming deep from the back of ones throat....as with an Afrikaans accent. With any language, I try to pronounce properly without making it sound like I am offering a caricature of the accent.
17 December 2010, 17:18
Rick R
My take on it was that the G sound in Afrikaans was a noise not used in polite company in the US.

With three groups of American hunters all trying to pronounce "Gemsbok" in camp our PH gave up and said it was pronounced "Oryx" Cool
17 December 2010, 23:21
ChrisTroskie
Thing is this...

People from different parts of the world have different ways of pronuncing words / letters... There's no "right" and "wrong". E.g. the Spanish pronunciation of the letter "X" is much different to what it is in the English alphabet (Mexico) as are the letters "l", "j" and "h" to name but a few...When a Spanish speaking person talk about Mallorca it will sound to non-Spanish speaking folk like "Majorca"... Is one right and another wrong? Of course not!

In the same sense - the Afrikaans pronunciation of the word "Gemsbok" is different to the English way of pronunciating the same word. There's no right and wrong way... and unfortunately discussions like this in the written word does not do much to clear things up... This is the beauty of being able to hear and speak...

Whether you tell me you want to hunt a "Gemsbok", "Gemsbuck", or "Hemsbok" I'll know what you are talking about... Come and hunt one of them and I'll be happy to give you a free lesson as far as the "Afrikaans" way of pronuncing the word is concerned...

Regards,


Regards,

Chris Troskie
Tel. +27 82 859-0771
email. chris@ct-safaris.com
Sabrisa Ranch Ellisras RSA
www.ct-safaris.com
https://youtu.be/4usXceRdkH4
18 December 2010, 00:12
Molepolole
I'm sure some of you African PHs are having a good chuckle over us Americans making a big deal about how we should pronounce gemsbok.

But if you really want to give your PH a good chuckle, the next time you're over there and see a shootable warthog, point at it and excitedly exclaim, "vlakvark, vlakvark!!!!!"
18 December 2010, 00:18
shakari
The most important phrase to remember & pronunce correctly is:

Would you like to have an Ardbeg with me? Wink






18 December 2010, 04:30
Eland Slayer
I remember walking around at the Houston Safari Club show a few years ago.....and hearing a fellow Texan (who I might add was also a little drunk) tell his buddies about his trip to South Africa where he shot a "Jemsbuck", a "Dewker", and a "Steambuck".....apparently referring to Gemsbok, Duiker, and Steenbok.

I could not help but giggle..... Big Grin


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27 December 2010, 06:36
Antlers
I 'spect a hemsbuck would love t' munch an akern if given d'chance...


Antlers
Double Rifle Shooters Society
Heym 450/400 3"
27 December 2010, 07:01
vapodog
quote:
Originally posted by shakari:
The most important phrase to remember & pronunce correctly is:

Would you like to have an Ardbeg with me? Wink

That sounds like something that could get one landed on the floor....

OK...I give up.....what does that mean? Big Grin

Is it a brand of Scotch?


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"Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery."
Winston Churchill
27 December 2010, 07:17
Cross L
Vapodog

Yes Ardbeg is a scotch and it is also Steves fuel stir
It may in fact be the nectar of the gods probably way to good for him.
rotflmo

SSR
27 December 2010, 07:25
vapodog
dancing Big Grin


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"Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery."
Winston Churchill
27 December 2010, 10:36
shakari
It's a fantastically good (Islay) single malt whisky.

http://www.ardbeg.com/home

I enjoy all the malts but especially the islay malts that have a very peaty flavour..... and of the Islay malts, I enjoy Ardbeg the most. If you can't buy Ardbeg in your neck of the woods, Laphroaig is a very enjoyable alternative. http://www.laphroaig.com/

All malts are (IMO) best drunk with about the same (or slightly less) amount of good water (this is called releasing the dragon) and I'd recommend you avoid adding ice as it kills all the subtleties of aroma and taste.

An interesting read on the subject that explains malt whisky is an easy way is 'The Malt Whisky File' by John Lamond & John Tucek if anyone is interested. - Esp useful is you can email John Lamond with any questions etc and he's always happy to help with informed comment. tu2

And yes, too much of it can get you landed on the floor! rotflmo






27 December 2010, 13:48
tendrams
quote:
Originally posted by Eland Slayer:
.....and hearing a fellow Texan ...tell his buddies about his trip to South Africa where he shot a "Jemsbuck", a "Dewker", and a "Steambuck"


Those animals probably look great right next to his Wilderbeast.
27 December 2010, 23:15
Anton van der Spek
Me and 1200 other members in my branch of our hunting society calls it a Gemsbok