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Yes, that explains it well and why so much head scratching in our household ! (English and Australian and New Zealand pronunciation)
Naturally 😉

I can think of a couple of pop culture references. One is a 'Yes Minister' episode S03E03 The Skeleton In The Cupboard.

The other is Frasier.. Anthony LaPaglia (Australian actor pretending to be English).

 
dma-way-261.jpg
 
Actually despite the way Captain Picard says it (day.ta), English and Australian pronunciation uses a long 'a' for both syllables of data (dah.tah), as we also do for master.
Data (day.ta) sounds for formal for some reason. That's actually how I say it as well as most of my coworkers (Canadians of domestic and international origin).

From my grade school recollection, Picard's pronunciation is the "long a" sound for the first syllable (mate, data, state etc.). "Short a" is for path, math, graph.
 
When the sequence is (vowel-consonant-vowel), the first vowel is long. On multiples, it also applies, but you'd never know it.
There are so many times this rule is broken either by Miriam Webster especially, or other sources that it took my (University English Major Mother) to an early grave.
That's nothing compared with my gripe:
Silent letters. I think we should all get together and just agree they do not belong in any language and move forward by beginning the elimination.
Sorry Mom, I know we use to disagree on that, but I was your son and you taught me well. Fight for what is right even if few are listening.

Hey wait, isn't this the picture thread?
My bad.
 
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