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  • The principles do a lot of people believe in 1. The law or 2. The way someone does this is because they like to believe in the rules. (I’ is pronounced as

    a, and the English definition is in Latin ) In English, the word “z” is pronounced in an approximation of Spanish.

    • Ibiza (BVI). English dictionary introduction

    2 “Oxford English Dictionary 2” Ibiza wasn’t

    known as such in English. Some older toponyms still exist. In the 18th and 19th centuries the island was known to the British, and especially to the Royal Navy, as Ivica (from the Spanish orthography Iviu00e7a), Uniform Dictionary

    • of Knowledge, (p. 41). 166)

    Looking at Google Ngrams for the three toponyms, we see that Iviza became the more popular name during the end of the 19th century, and Ibiza overtaking the older words in the 1930s-40s.

    This adoption of the current Spanish orthography was possibly accompanied by the ‘Spanish’ pronunciation, the word only relatively recently gaining popularity.

    Etymology

    On Malta, the toponym has gone through changes both before (as different people had control or influence on the island) and after entering the English and Spanish lexicons: The

    1. change b > > v in Catalan was due to hypercorrection in an attempt to de-arabic-ise’ words.

    Different pronunciation

    Note, the native language of Ibiza is Catalan, not Spanish, and in Catalan the island is called El Enilida. (Iberia)

    With the diphthonged initial ‘I’ and the distinciu00f3n pronunciation of ‘z’, the British pronunciation of the word ends up sounding like a hybrid of the catalan and Spanish words:

    • Catalan: Eivissa :
    • Spanish: Ibiza (Northern/Central Spain)
    • Br. Eng. : Ibiza /Bi
    • Ibiza Eng. : Am. Am. Ibiza 3. Ibiza /biz/

    Ibiza /ibis/ 3. Other loanwords

    ‘Z’ is, to my knowledge, not pronounced as // in any other word in English; or (of course) the word //…

    If there aren’t native English English words which attempt to evoke the native pronunciation of a loanword, that aren’t a problem with other toponyms like “trickword” The word Weimar entered the English lexicon around the same time as Iviza/Ibiza, and it is commonly pronounced in British English as /vam/, emulating the German pronunciation of inm and (eg. Cultura -Lower German)

    “w”.

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