The following is a list of words and names which are often pronounced by native speakers of the English language in ways which many others consider to be incorrect. In some cases this is because of uncertain knowledge of a foreign language; in others it is a dispute between the spelling of a word and a newer pronunciation that has arisen since the spelling was fixed. In some cases it may because of national differences (such as British versus American), though these are not usually considered 'incorrect', merely different.
February (feb-u-airy more common than feb-ru-airy)
Forte (someone's strong point) is frequently pronounced for-tay as if from Italian, though it's originally from French and was pronounced like fort.
Hans[?]; given name e.g. of Hans Blix (many people with this name pronounce it with a short vowel, rhyming with bunns, as the German short form of the name Johannes. Others pronounce it Americanized: similar to scans, and/or (mis-)pronounce this name by using an elongated vowel, as in pawns.
Iran (ih-RAN or ih-RAHN - often pronounced eye-RAN)
Iraq (ih-RAK or ih-RAHK - often pronounced eye-RAK)
Islam (is-LAHM is closer to the Arabic pronunciation than IS-lahm or iz-LAHM)
Kyoto (Most people pronounce it key-O-to, but in the original Japanese, it is actually pronounced more like KYO-o-to) (Romanized Japanese, often expresses the double-syllable vowel as "oo" - spoken "o,o". Often in English the second vowel is dropped, as in "Tokyo", which in Japanese is pronounced "To-ok-yo.")
... there are 16,146 people, 5,480 households, and 4,197 families residing in the town. The population density is 1,058.4/km² (2,740.4/mi²). There are 5,574 ...