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Published 14:14 19 Jun 2019 BST
Updated 18:06 19 Jun 2019 BST

However, now a map has been invented (above) which tells you which parts of Ireland and the UK say it which way.
The creator of the map, Brilliant Maps, said: "The data was collected by Cambridge university and managed to map the pronunciation of scone across the UK and Ireland.
"Scone rhyming with gone is almost universal in Scotland whereas in England it’s a lot more controversial. Americans apparently pronounce them rhyming with 'cone'.
"For anyone outside the UK a 'scone' is a small bread/cake which is baked and lightly sweetened.
"Some people have compared them to the American word for 'biscuit' but the two are very different in texture and how they’re eaten.
"While a biscuit is usually flaky and often eaten savoury, a scone is sweet, dense, crumbly and often served with butter or traditionally cream and strawberries.
"This is inline with statistics that show younger people tend to pronounce is rhyming with 'cone' rather than 'gone'."