The Great Porsche Pronunciation Debate: "Porsh" or "Porsh-uh"?
Few topics in car culture have caused more friendly arguments—and unnecessary confidence—than how to pronounce Porsche.
On one side, you've got the "Porsh" crowd. Fast, efficient, no extra syllables, no apologies. It's clean, it's simple, and it gets the job done—kind of like a perfectly executed shift.
On the other side, you've got the "Porsh-uh" loyalists. They'll tell you it's the correct way, the original way, and they're not afraid to gently (or not so gently) correct you mid-conversation.
And the truth?
They're both kind of right… and also not really the point.
The company was founded by Ferdinand Porsche, and in German, it is pronounced "Porsh-uh." That soft ending is part of the name's identity. But once it made its way into English, things got a little more flexible.
Because if there's one thing English does well, it's confidently mispronouncing things and moving on.
At this point, the debate has taken on a life of its own. It's less about pronunciation and more about personality. It's the kind of thing that comes up at car meets, in comment sections, and right around the time someone says, "Actually…"
The best part?
The car couldn't care less.
Whether you say "Porsh" or "Porsh-uh," the experience is exactly the same. The sound, the feel, the way it pulls you through a corner—it all hits just as hard, no matter how you said it five minutes earlier.
So go ahead. Say it your way. Just be prepared to defend it like it's a personality trait.
We Leaned Into It
That's how The Frunk Club came to life—a brand built by people who genuinely love these cars, the culture around them, and yes… the little debates that come with it.
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At the end of the day, this isn't really about pronunciation.
It's about the early morning drives. The random conversations with strangers at gas stations. The satisfaction of a perfect road. The little moments that make owning and driving these cars so much fun.
Arguing over how to say it is just part of the culture.
So say it however you want. Smile when someone disagrees. And if it turns into a debate, even better—that's half the fun.
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—The Frunk Club Team