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Posted

So, how do you guys pronounce QDRO?

I've heard kew-drow. And qua-drow. Even sounded all the way out: kew-dee-arh-oh

How do you say it?

QKA, QPA, CPC, ERPA

Two wrongs don't make a right, but three rights make a left.

Posted

qua-drow

John Simmons

johnsimmonslaw@gmail.com

Note to Readers: For you, I'm a stranger posting on a bulletin board. Posts here should not be given the same weight as personalized advice from a professional who knows or can learn all the facts of your situation.

Posted

I have always heard Qua (as in Qua-lified) - dro (as in dro-ne).

George D. Burns

Cost Reduction Strategies

Burns and Associates, Inc

www.costreductionstrategies.com(under construction)

www.employeebenefitsstrategies.com(under construction)

Guest Robin.Wolf
Posted
So, how do you guys pronounce QDRO?

I've heard kew-drow. And qua-drow. Even sounded all the way out: kew-dee-arh-oh

How do you say it?

"Qua-Dro"

Posted

oh, so now you are going to tell me the other terms are

Qua - Dee - Eye - A (canadian Qua - Dee - Eye - Eh)

and Qua - Nec

for the record I asked the actuary in the office and he said

"How do you want it to be pronounced?" huh, go and figure.

Posted

I believe I read somewhere that the pronoucification of acronyms, even of those related in applicationistic ways, may be, but is not required to be, tonally consistent (emphasis added ... not sure why).

Posted

Now I am curious as to how you treat "h".

George D. Burns

Cost Reduction Strategies

Burns and Associates, Inc

www.costreductionstrategies.com(under construction)

www.employeebenefitsstrategies.com(under construction)

Posted

oh - I stopped doing that a long time ago. I have my admin. assistant pronounce that for me now ...

Posted
oh, so now you are going to tell me the other terms are

Qua - Dee - Eye - A (canadian Qua - Dee - Eye - Eh)

and Qua - Nec

for the record I asked the actuary in the office and he said

"How do you want it to be pronounced?" huh, go and figure.

I've heard tell that AP's, upon receiving a QDRO, sometimes pronounce it: Yipee Kiya. Not sure how consistent that is.

John Simmons

johnsimmonslaw@gmail.com

Note to Readers: For you, I'm a stranger posting on a bulletin board. Posts here should not be given the same weight as personalized advice from a professional who knows or can learn all the facts of your situation.

Posted
Now I am curious as to how you treat "h".

It depends on where the 'h' appears in the word. If it appears at the beginning of the word, it is ignored. Otherwise, it is recognized.

Hello is 'ello

She is she

Here is 'ear and here is 'ere

Brush is brush

Happy is 'appy.

But! if I am talking to someone other than a fellow Jamaican, the H at the beginning of the word is heavily enunciated- maybe as a way to make sure there is no misunderstanding :lol:

Life and Death Planning for Retirement Benefits by Natalie B. Choate
https://www.ataxplan.com/life-and-death-planning-for-retirement-benefits/

www.DeniseAppleby.com

 

Posted

You forgot about the habit of some to add an "h" to words which begin with a vowel. HAppleby, for example.

Hemphasize your haiches you hignorant hass. (Part of an old Jamaican joke).

George D. Burns

Cost Reduction Strategies

Burns and Associates, Inc

www.costreductionstrategies.com(under construction)

www.employeebenefitsstrategies.com(under construction)

Posted
You forgot about the habit of some to add an "h" to words which begin with a vowel. HAppleby, for example.

Hemphasize your haiches you hignorant hass. (Part of an old Jamaican joke).

LOL :lol: . I forgot about that one.

Life and Death Planning for Retirement Benefits by Natalie B. Choate
https://www.ataxplan.com/life-and-death-planning-for-retirement-benefits/

www.DeniseAppleby.com

 

Posted

There's no point in trying to make any sense of the English language. I gave up long ago. Consider:

bomb

comb

tomb

womb

And why is the word "verb" a noun?

And finally, to hopefully put a smile on your face:

Tony Blair is visiting an Edinburgh hospital. He enters a ward full of patients with no obvious sign of injury or illness and greets one. The patient replies:

"Fair fa your honest sonsie face,

Great chieftain o' the puddin race,

Aboon them a you take your place,

Painch, tripe or thairm,

As langs my airm."

Blair is confused, so he just grins and moves on to the next patient. The patient responds:

"Some hae meat and canna eat,

And some wad eat that want it,

But we hae meat and we can eat,

So let the Lord be thankit."

Even more confused, and his grin now rictus-like, the PM moves on to the next patient, who immediately begins to chant:

"Wee sleekit, cowerin, timrous beasty,

Thou needna start awa sae hastie,

Wi bickering brattle."

Now troubled, Blair turns to the accompanying doctor and asks "What kind of facility is this? A mental ward?"

"No", replies the doctor.

"This is the serious Burns unit."

Posted

I'd argue the "d" should be in the first syllable... so quad-ro.

For sake of comparison, consider the words "quadratic" and "quadriplegic". The question is can you add a slight pause after the "qua" and stil have the word sound right.

On the note of silly English:

ghoti = fish http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghoti

Kurt Vonnegut: 'To be is to do'-Socrates 'To do is to be'-Jean-Paul Sartre 'Do be do be do'-Frank Sinatra

Posted
There's no point in trying to make any sense of the English language. I gave up long ago. Consider:

bomb

comb

tomb

womb

And why is the word "verb" a noun?

And finally, to hopefully put a smile on your face:

Tony Blair is visiting an Edinburgh hospital. He enters a ward full of patients with no obvious sign of injury or illness and greets one. The patient replies:

"Fair fa your honest sonsie face,

Great chieftain o' the puddin race,

Aboon them a you take your place,

Painch, tripe or thairm,

As langs my airm."

Blair is confused, so he just grins and moves on to the next patient. The patient responds:

"Some hae meat and canna eat,

And some wad eat that want it,

But we hae meat and we can eat,

So let the Lord be thankit."

Even more confused, and his grin now rictus-like, the PM moves on to the next patient, who immediately begins to chant:

"Wee sleekit, cowerin, timrous beasty,

Thou needna start awa sae hastie,

Wi bickering brattle."

Now troubled, Blair turns to the accompanying doctor and asks "What kind of facility is this? A mental ward?"

"No", replies the doctor.

"This is the serious Burns unit."

Don't you hate those people who kill a joke with questions? Well, me too, but I gotta ask. Is this as in Robert Burns and these men were seriously taken to mimicking his style?

Life and Death Planning for Retirement Benefits by Natalie B. Choate
https://www.ataxplan.com/life-and-death-planning-for-retirement-benefits/

www.DeniseAppleby.com

 

Posted

masteff makes a fine qlifying point, with which I agree.

Let's not forget words like kinetic, kleptocracy, kritarchy, krobylos, ...

that begin with "k" as in knife

Posted
I'd argue the "d" should be in the first syllable... so quad-ro.

I say kwa-dro, since QDRO is an extension of DRO. It's a kwa-lified DRO, hence the kwa-dro pronunciation (by me).

Funny, I thought we's at least have a couple of kew-dro's in da house...

QKA, QPA, CPC, ERPA

Two wrongs don't make a right, but three rights make a left.

Posted

WDWC ?

George D. Burns

Cost Reduction Strategies

Burns and Associates, Inc

www.costreductionstrategies.com(under construction)

www.employeebenefitsstrategies.com(under construction)

Posted

WDIK - With apologies for any previous (and certainly unintended) insensitivity, what pronunciation of WDIK do you prefer?

Posted
WDIK - With apologies for any previous (and certainly unintended) insensitivity, what pronunciation of WDIK do you prefer?

Each letter should be said separately and in order, of course.

...but then again, What Do I Know?

Posted
WDIK - With apologies for any previous (and certainly unintended) insensitivity, what pronunciation of WDIK do you prefer?

Each letter should be said separately and in order, of course.

And if we say them backwards, do you go back to your normal plane of existence?

Posted

Yes Denise, the guys in the hospital were talking/reciting Robert Burns the Scottish poet.

JanetM CPA, MBA

Posted
And if we say them backwards, do you go back to your normal plane of existence?

You win the award for the most obscure superman villain reference of the day.

...but then again, What Do I Know?

Posted
And if we say them backwards, do you go back to your normal plane of existence?

You win the reward for the most obscure superman villain reference of the day.

At least I won something!

Posted
WDIK - With apologies for any previous (and certainly unintended) insensitivity, what pronunciation of WDIK do you prefer?

Each letter should be said separately and in order, of course.

If that's the case, it's not an acronym but an abbreviation.

QKA, QPA, CPC, ERPA

Two wrongs don't make a right, but three rights make a left.

Posted
Does that mean that CEO, ABA, and NFL are abbreviations?

If you have shortened a word or group of words, it's an abbreviation (inc for incorporated, cpa for certified public accountant).

If you pronounce an abbreviation as a word, it's an acronym (modem for modulate-demodulate).

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/acronym

PBGC is an abbreviation.

ERISA is both an abbreviation and an acronym.

Kurt Vonnegut: 'To be is to do'-Socrates 'To do is to be'-Jean-Paul Sartre 'Do be do be do'-Frank Sinatra

Posted
Does that mean that CEO, ABA, and NFL are abbreviations?

If you have shortened a word or group of words, it's an abbreviation (inc for incorporated, cpa for certified public accountant).

If you pronounce an abbreviation as a word, it's an acronym (modem for modulate-demodulate).

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/acronym

PBGC is an abbreviation.

ERISA is both an abbreviation and an acronym.

radar (RAdio Detecting And Ranging)

laser (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation)

scuba (Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus)

...are all acronyms (radar being a palindrome, too)

QKA, QPA, CPC, ERPA

Two wrongs don't make a right, but three rights make a left.

Posted

Then of course, there's fubar & snafu. Acrominious acronyms, I guess . . . or is it acromonious?

Posted
I'm only an abbreviation? I feel so minimized!

Is the world squeezing you in? Making you feel contracted? ;)

Kurt Vonnegut: 'To be is to do'-Socrates 'To do is to be'-Jean-Paul Sartre 'Do be do be do'-Frank Sinatra

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