“Call ’em again; nobody moves,” she repeats. “Finally, this mom stands up and says, ‘Do you mean Y-U-M?’.”
While Lindsey clarified that “Yum” isn’t what she said and that it doesn’t match the name “Liam” on the list, she still gets backlash from the mother that she never expected.
“Yeah,” the mother says to her. “It’s short for William.”
But there’s one difference in pronunciation here. You probably read that as most would: William. Maybe, to get the tone across, it should be spelled more like this: Will-Yum.
That is what the mother thought she nicknamed her son. Since in some southern dialects, “William” is emphasized on the last syllable, it comes out more like “Willium,” with the “u” hypothetically replacing the “a.”
It is because of this that the mother thought the nickname “Liam” was genuinely pronounced like the ending of “William” in a southern accent: “Yum.”
Lindsey said no more after this, ending the video with her eyes closed in disbelief.
Out of every name that parents invent for their children, never did it cross my mind that “Liam” would become “Yum.” I guess there’s a first time for everything.
You can watch Lindsey’s original video here.
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