Cheesetown777 on 17.01.2026 1:42 a.m. So I just discovered the British pronounce it differently than Americans when me and my boyfriend (playfully) argued how about how it’s pronounced. Also a scone isn’t at all like an American scone. It’s basically a biscuit (but I guess a biscuit is a cookie in the UK).
ForgottenPasswordABC on 17.01.2026 2:00 a.m. US scone rhymes with bone or cone or hone. Scotland scone rhymes with lawn or fawn or dawn.
earthhominid on 17.01.2026 7:44 a.m. I do not like the world this map is revealing to me. Scone should not rhyme with con or lawn and why on god’s green earth is the scone map picturing biscuits?!
Platform_Dancer on 17.01.2026 8:27 a.m. Scone (gone) is a scone (cone) that’s been eaten!… It’s scgone 😊
4 Kommentare
So I just discovered the British pronounce it differently than Americans when me and my boyfriend (playfully) argued how about how it’s pronounced.
Also a scone isn’t at all like an American scone. It’s basically a biscuit (but I guess a biscuit is a cookie in the UK).
US scone rhymes with bone or cone or hone. Scotland scone rhymes with lawn or fawn or dawn.
I do not like the world this map is revealing to me.
Scone should not rhyme with con or lawn and why on god’s green earth is the scone map picturing biscuits?!
Scone (gone) is a scone (cone) that’s been eaten!… It’s scgone 😊