would people who speak a non-rhotic dialect of english pronounce eula the same as euler?
@BatElite Euler as in the mathematician. I'm not familiar with any case in which it would be pronounced "you-lar".
@Felthry Well, I'd figure the most probably English pronunciation of EULA is "you-lah"?
Does that make sense?
@BatElite Yeah, it does, but I just can't break the similarity to Euler's name making me want to pronounce it "oi-luh"
@Felthry Makes sense. FWIW I would probably pronounce the r in Euler too, but that might not be correct for the {German? or a dialect?}
@BatElite That's what I meant by saying a "non-rhotic" dialect; several British dialects are examples, where r at the end of a syllable is just not really pronounced
@Felthry I wasn't familiar with that term. :P
@BatElite Well, now you are!
@Felthry Euler as in the mathematician? or more "you-lar"?