How do you pronounce Hekate/Hecate?
I really want to know how to pronounce the name Hekate, sometimes spelled Hecate. Thanks!
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As far as I know, it's HEH-kah-tee--that's how it was pronunced when I went to see Macbeth.Array
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Hmm, I've always thought it was HEH-kate, but the site says HEH-kah-tee as well
CIARDA

This message was edited 2/16/2005, 8:38 PM

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I always thought it was HEH-kat/ HEH-kut (last syllable kind of depends on your accent)
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Well the last syllable has to be -tee because it's from Greek mythology.
I'm pretty sure(97% sure) it's HEH-kah-tee.-Seda*
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The Royal Navy ship on which I served was always pronounced
HEH KA TEE
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In its original (ahem, Greek) pronounciation, the accent is on the second syllable in the H is almost silent: eh-KAH-teeOf couse an Anglosaxon would pronounce it HECK-ah-tea
and a Francophone would go "espece de eh-ka-TEE", go figure...
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Surely in the 'original' original pronounciation.....that is, the Ancient Greek one, the h would be pronounced? and the final e would be an ehhh sound?
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Where have *you* been? Havent seen you in aeons :)
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I am always...somewhere.But I try to be here on a regular basis. Sometimes there's just nothing I want to say.
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heh-kah-teh
~~ Claire ~~
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Most of us Anglos follow that nice Mr Shakespeare, and he makes it easy for us by using metrical verse. So, when he spells it with an -e on the end, it's Heh ca tee, and when he doesn't, as I say for metrical purposes, it's Heh cat.The one thing it isn't is heh cate where the cate rhymes with gate. In English conventions the final e lengthens the preceding vowel, but not in Greek, where it gets pronounced. Which is why Chloe rhymes with Joey, not with Joe ...
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