Northerner
Admin (Retired)
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
Go on, how do you pronounce it? I ask because the Abbott rep yesterday called it a Lee-bray, whereas I have always called it a Lee-bruh 🙂 There is no acute accent on the final 'e'.
I’m a Lee-bruh, as has been said, there’s no acute accent. Everyone appears to understand that.
Libre is Latin not English French or Spanish.
It means 'pounds' LOL
Americans mostly
In parts of Lancashire, particularly in Burnley and down Rossendale Valley, and round Chorley and Wigan way, the letter R is heavily emphasised, so the final E in Libre gets lost in that, so it’s not so much flat vowels, more elided vowels, almost unvoiced. Where do you fit in?Lee-bruh for me too, I do remember wondering when it launched if it might be Lee-bray though because I assumed it was American and American English tends to be more phonetic in nature. Either way it’s lee-bruh to me now, and so it shall remain, it’s particularly delightful with my flat vowel inflection even if I say so myself 😉