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Weiner's Back

I think the name "Weiner" is Yiddish, not German, in which case the vowel was originally pronounced "ey" (as in "hey"). When transliterated to English, some took the German pronunciation ("ay"), and some went with the English-style "ee."
 
Yes, yes it is. So is the attack on the fair pay act, and trying to limit access to health care as well as contraceptives.
And if every guy doesn't get an new Xbox from the government, it must be a war on men! If every family doesn't get a free subscription to Netflix from the government, it must be a war on families! In other words if anyone doesn't get what they want, it means the government is at war against them. Yep that logic works to try to smear the opposing party.
 
It is possible that his name had the [wee-nur] pronunciation ever since his family arrived at Ellis Island, when some functionary pronounced it wrong, and the family may have just figured that's their new American identity. It's hard to imagine a kid surviving grade school with that pronunciation though.

In English you can pronounce your name pretty much any way you choose. I think of Sandra Fluke, who uses the pronunciation that rhymes with "book". That is exceptional for an English spelling.

I don't know much about German, even less about Yiddish, but I do know that "wein" pronounced [vayn), like "vine", means "wine" in English, and the following quoted remark below seems generally accurate.

I can't find any word in German on line dictionaries spelled "weiner", but the word "weinerlich" (+lich is a kind of adverbial +ly suffix) has several meanings related to "whining" or "sniveling". :D


http://theweek.com/article/index/247501/why-is-weiner-sometimes-weener-and-sometimes-whiner#

If he lived in Germany, his name would indeed have the "eye" pronunciation but in the United States both the "eye" and "ee" pronunciations show up for this name, for reasons having to do with ethnicity, sound drift, and chance. There is a German name Weiner that comes from a dialectal pronunciation of Wagner, related to Waggoner, meaning wagon-maker. But Anthony Weiner is Jewish, and according to dictionaries of Jewish surnames, his name probably originates from the Yiddish name Vayner, meaning wine merchant. Yiddish is related to German, and Vayner is related to the German word Wein for "wine," and pronounced with the "eye" vowel. But there is another less common but also predominately Jewish surname Wiener, meaning someone who comes from Vienna.
Vienna in German is Wien, pronounced [veen].
 
Wiener referred to interns as "Monica".

In the Tuesday cover story, Nuzzi wrote that Weiner often called interns Monica, a reference to former White House intern Monica Lewinsky, and that many people worked on the campaign only to get close to Weiner's wife, Huma Abedin, an ex-aide to former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton.
 
Anthony Weiner's political career is essentially a 21st century art project in exhibitionism and sexual frustration, just as Herman Cain's campaign for the presidency was nothing more than a mildly clever pizza ad.
 
Love the headline in a Jewish Newspaper:

"Weiner is in the #1 spot...with comedians".
 
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Some speculation that the sexism issues that Weiner managed to raise is helping Christine Quinn to a lead in the polls. Weiner, btw, is in fourth place and dropping.
 
Carlos Danger is back again. He just can't stop himself.

And who could have predicted that a marriage officiated by Bill Clinton might collapse from infidelity?
 
Carlos Danger is back again. He just can't stop himself.

And who could have predicted that a marriage officiated by Bill Clinton might collapse from infidelity?

You know, if being married to Huma Abedin wasn't enough motivation for him to stop, I can't imagine anything would be.
 
And who could have predicted that a marriage officiated by Bill Clinton might collapse from infidelity?
Probably no one, since Bill and Hillary Clinton have been married for nearly 41 years and continue to be so.
 
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