Not courtesy. Soo dough bang bang'), or maybe because dough rhymes with go.I was taught -dough at first being introduced to Linux, then my mentor found out it came from "superuser do" and was therefore -doo, but I was too stubborn to change :) Nowadays I still call it -dough just because I think it sounds better.Am I the only one that didn't know there was another way to pronounce this?

Never thought to look it up Which leads me to believe it SHOULD be pronounced “soo doo” which is a bummer because it sounds weird so I’ll keep pronouncing it “soo dough”. No, it's not superuser do. Tens of thousands of air travelers who can't get where they want to go. I heard it pronounced "pseudo" for years before I heard some random video on the internet pronounce it as "doo". I am thinking about aliasing sudo to please, however.

"Sudo ~ Pseudo" Actually it's supposed to be pronounced /so͞o′dō/Pseudo. It's from su command "switch user".

He/Him. Most of the experts and bureaucrats who came from Washington and elsewhere to fix the region's problems beginning in the 1960s adopted the northern pronunciation, while resident experts favor the southern-- which led to a situation, according to one commentator, wherein "people who said AppaLAYchia were perceived as outsiders who didn't know what they were talking about but were more than willing to tell people from the mountains what to do and how they should do it. Learn how to pronounce the names of different mountains in Snowdonia as well as finding out their meanings and literal translations in English, some may come as a surprise to you! Totally that is what we day ”syou-do” because it's superuser do. Also check the man page that says "sudo, sudoedit — execute a command as another user".

That means not necessary superuser.You are right, the commands are named for "switch user" not "super user". It's from su command "switch user".

i had a math prof who taught us about furrier serious.Nope. But by repeating the syllables of the word, it should take you just a few minutes to pronounce Eyjafjallajökull better than most.

Residents of southern and central Appalachia pronounce the term with a short -a- in the stressed third syllable; further north, the same -a- is given a long pronunciation, as in "Appal-achia." Also check the man page that says "sudo, sudoedit — execute a command as another user". Also check the man page that says "sudo, sudoedit — execute a command as another user".How about man pages are required to also include the intended pronunciation including IPA key? And "psuedo" also resonates really well with sudo because you aren't fully switching to the other user to execute the command like you do with su. However, I still think of it as pseudo superuser because that is the default user that you switch to with su or sudo and is the way I use it 99% of the time. However, I still think of it as pseudo superuser because that is the default user that you switch to with Non-native speaker here, asking just out of curiosity: if phonetic (assuming English) why isn’t that I just looked it up and "superuser" is one word. Also, the two vowels used are different so it feels more natural (to me) to use different sounds between the syllables.

However you say it, it's caused problems. If you pronounce it with a “Lay” by all means continue to do so.

Would like to meet her some day.

that is, after all, a word with no obvious connection to command lines.It's not superuser actually.

Habitually like the US English pronunciation of 'pseudo'.When actually explaining the command to people though, I pronounce it as three syllables, spelling out the first two letters and pronouncing the last two just like the English word 'do', because that's how it breaks down as an acronym (short for 'Switch User and DO', derived from All I've ever heard people say when talking about it is 'switch' though, probably because that's the mental flow for most people.I've heard people say that, but it's pretty well established that No, it's not. But understand when you do so while in the Southern Mountains you immediately identify yourself as an outsider. It is a protection from making mistakes, a design feature to isolate user-level from system-level changes. Somehow I think, I would do everything she tells me to do. accents can be fun.

(Look at gif, where most of the internet disagrees with the creator of the format on pronunciation. It's from su command "switch user". Although the translation isn't that challenging, pronouncing the name of this volcano is, Icelandic can be a very difficult language to master.