CONCORD, N.H. (AP) โ I came. I saw. I Concord.
A New Hampshire lawmaker wants to amend state law to include an official pronunciation of the capital city, one of many communities called Concord across the country. While North Carolinians pronounce the second syllable so it rhymes with โbored,โ New Hampshire, Massachusetts and California are among those who favor something closer to โ in the words of Julius Caesar โ โconquered.โ
Rep. Eric Gallager, a Democrat from Concord, also wants to include an official pronunciation of โNew Hampshireโ in state law to make it clear that โshireโ rhymes with โfurโ not โfire.โ He proposes including the official pronunciations written out according to the international phonetic alphabet in a section of law that lists state symbols such as the official state sport (skiing), song (10 different tunes including โOld New Hampshireโ), and spider ( daring jumping spider ).
โThese are the symbols by which you are recognized, and branding is actually something that organizations take really seriously and spend a lot of money on,โ Gallager told a House committee Tuesday.
Rep. Dianne Schuett, a Democrat from Pembroke, asked Gallager if he discussed his bill with โold Yankee folksโ who pronounce the capital as โCon-kid, New Hamp-shah.โ
โIโll tell you, Iโm fearful that some of them may be offended if we mandated a specific pronunciation that doesnโt jibe with their heritage,โ she said.
Gallager said his bill would not be a mandate, just as the other state symbols are not universally embraced.
โEven though the state fruit is the pumpkin, you can still grow other fruits besides pumpkins, which Iโm sure our apple growers appreciate,โ he said.
And while he acknowledged the legislation may appear trivial, Gallager said he tries to โgo for things that other people arenโt also legislating about.โ
โWith a lot of the other more important issues, the trenches are already dug and people have already made up their minds,โ he said. โBut with something more minor like this one, I think we can have a chance to bring people together and actually pass some legislation.โ