ANSWERS: 19
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Surup. My grandma says "Seerup." Of course, she also says "Warsh" instead of "Wash."
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I've always pronounced it "surup". That's how everyone around me also says it.
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Surup. I don't know anyone who says it the other way.
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Seerup. In New Jersey, we hardly say anything the way the rest of the country does.
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surup
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surup always, never even heard this seerup before
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surup lol q-pon or coopon caramel or carmel
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I say surup...except I was saying it in my head just now, and when I got to number 25 it sounded more like srrrrrup. is that bad?
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I've always said seer, (as in seer the juices into the steak), up. Seer-up. I learned something new tonite.
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"Surup"! I always thought the other way sounded ridiculous. Could be a Southern thing, though.
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I say "Sir-Up" - but I grew up downstate-Illinois...
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Sir-up for me.
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For me, like 'stirrup' but withough the 't'
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Sirup, like Missfraise says, stirrup without the T x
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Surup
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It will be pronounced as sĭr-′əp (sir-up)
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They'll understand, I'm sure!
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It rhymes with `stirrup`.
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https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/pronunciation/english/syrup Press the red icons and hear either the American or British pronunciation.
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