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Jay's avatar

Free advice for law firm applicants...the day before your interview, or even the day of, or even in the elevator on the way up to the office, or the parking lot before you go in, call reception and see how the receptionist pronounces the firm's name.

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Bill Dyer (aka Beldar)'s avatar

Regarding Frenchified (as opposed to French fried) names, at Baker Botts they told me the story of a young lawyer sent by the firm to a rural Texas county — one outside the oil patch — to defend the firm's regular client Schlumberger, named after its founding family in France, and pronounced by them (and by those familiar with them in the oil patch) as "SCHLUM-bur-zhay."

The clerk called their case on the docket, and understandably pronounced it in an Americanized fashion to end with with a hard G to begin its final syllable, and a vocalized R at the end — "ger."

The Baker Botts associate stood and announced his name and readiness on behalf of the firm — but after a glance at his client-representative, ventured to add a correction: "And my client is French, so its name is pronounced 'SCHLUM-bur-zhay.'"

This tickled the trial judge. He started laughing, and laughed himself into breathlessness, after which he said, "Well, however it's pronounced, we're glad to have all y'all here in our courthouse. But you Houston boys will need to stand down for a while. It's nearly noon, and I'm going across the street to the diner to have myself a hamber-zhay!"

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