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Is it JAY-son?

Or is jay-SON?

Maybe something entirely different?

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21  
Let's call the whole thing off. – Syntactic May 19 '10 at 18:51
21  
I think you meant |ˈjāsən| vs |ˈjāsôn| – Ryan McGeary Jan 31 '11 at 23:14

closed as not constructive by jonsca, Flexo, Ferdinand Beyer, interjay, Tim Cooper Aug 24 '11 at 13:08

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5 Answers

From Douglas Crockford, the creator of JSON:

"We decided to give it a name, so we called it JSML – rhymes with dismal – the JavaScript Message Language. But it turned out there's another standard that nobody has ever heard of in the Java world, called Java Speech Markup Language. So I was like OK, we need to come up with another name, so we came up with JSON: JavaScript Object Notation. There's a lot of argument about how you pronounce that, but I strictly don't care. I think probably the correct pronunciation is [French accent] "Je son"."

source: developer.yahoo.com

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22  
Crockford also pronounces it like the first name "Jason" in his many talks. – wlangstroth May 19 '10 at 19:10
3  
citation to above comment: youtube.com/watch?v=NXiAKPTDXk8 – Saboosh Dec 28 '11 at 23:20
1  
This was CLEARLY a joke by Crockford. He pronounces it like the first name "Jason" as @wlangstroth mentions. – mrmanly May 15 '12 at 17:58
1  
And what about JSONP? I just end up saying all the letters because "Jason Pee" sounds stupid. – Brien Malone Nov 2 '12 at 17:27
Just think if it was called JSML - Jizz-mal. Sheesh.. too many connotations! – 0A0D Nov 15 '12 at 14:21

I've heard it both ways, but personally I prefer JAY-son.

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1  
So like the name, Jason? – 0A0D Nov 15 '12 at 14:23

I've also heard it pronounced as if spelling it in conversation as well (similar to how most people pronounce ATM). I tend to prefer 'Jason', but however it's pronounced, I think it's pretty clear what the speaker is referring to in context (generally - not always the case amongst non-techies).

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16  
That's because your name is Phil. Call me when you work in an open office plan and your coworkers start working with the FIL project and see how you feel then. It's goddamned distracting. – Jason Sep 22 '11 at 16:49
Good point made there, I think I'm going to start spelling it out explicitly from now on! – Phil Street Sep 23 '11 at 4:13

I typically find that at conferences and interest groups, those in the know call it "Jason", while those that simply picked up the term from the internet, call it J----SON.

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10  
Right, because you know you know something when you've heard it with your ears rather than just read it. Ever heard of deaf people? Are they excluded from this 'know' you speak of? – user132014 Jul 7 '10 at 18:43
Why was this downvoted? – 0A0D Nov 15 '12 at 14:22

It is definitely JAY-SAHN. Without a doubt- do not ever call it jason.

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