I particularly wonder about "nearby" when used as an "adjective" (or modifier in a multi-stressed compound, hard to say what it is) before a noun: "in nearby countries". Does anyone have [ɪn ˈniɚbaɪ ˈkʰɐntɹ̥iz] here?
Dictionaries list "thereabout" and "wherefore" as stressed on the first syllable. Some also list "thereabout" with stress on -bout- though, and "wherefore" as a compound was maybe just enough idiomatic / semantically obscure for it to undergo stress correction. I mean, the thing is even spelled with -e, even though it's literally where+for, cf. the spellings of all+so > also, all+most > almost, all+one > alone --the last one is pronounced very differently of course.
I'd expect "Scioto" to be [saɪˈoʊtoʊ, ʃaɪ-, si-, ʃi-]. Possibly, but a lot less likely, with [-tə] or antepenultimate stress [ˈsaɪətoʊ, ˈʃaɪ-].Linguoboy wrote: ↑Thu Jun 18, 2020 2:58 pm TIL that Columbus, Ohio lies at the confluence of the Scioto and Olentangy rivers. I got the pronunciation of "Scioto" right on my second guess (my natural urge is to pronounce it as if it were Italian) but I munged "Olentangy". Let's see how the rest of you do!
For "Olentangy", I'd expect [ˈoʊlənˌtʰæŋi, ˌɑɫ-], possibly, but a bit less likely, with [-ˌtʰɑŋ-].