Master the pronunciation of no-code and low-code automation platform names — including the notoriously tricky n8n — before your next interview.
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How is n8n (workflow automation tool) correctly pronounced?
n8n is pronounced 'NAYT-en' — the 8 replaces the letters 'odematio' in 'nodemation'. Stress on NAYT. Don't say 'en-AYT-en' spelling out N-8-N. In a technical interview: "n8n's self-hosted option meant we could automate internal workflows without sending data to a third-party cloud."
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How is Budibase (low-code platform) correctly pronounced?
Budibase is pronounced 'BYOO-dee-bays' — 'Budi' (like the name) plus 'base'. Stress on BYOO. Don't say 'BUD-ih-bays' (short U, like 'buddy'). In a technical interview: "Budibase connected to our Postgres database and generated a full CRUD admin panel in under ten minutes."
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How is Zapier (automation platform) correctly pronounced?
Zapier is pronounced 'ZAP-ee-er' — rhymes with 'happier', from the word 'zap'. Stress on ZAP. Don't say 'ZAY-pee-er' or 'ZAP-yer'. In a technical interview: "We use Zapier to push new Typeform submissions directly into our CRM without any custom integration code."
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How is Tooljet (open-source low-code platform) correctly pronounced?
Tooljet is pronounced 'TOOL-jet' — 'tool' plus 'jet'. Stress on TOOL. Don't say 'tool-JET' with back stress. In a technical interview: "Tooljet's drag-and-drop builder let our ops team ship an internal ticketing dashboard without involving engineering."
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How is Windmill (open-source workflow engine) correctly pronounced?
Windmill is pronounced 'WIND-mil' — exactly like the structure that harnesses wind. Stress on WIND. Don't say 'WIN-dmill' separating 'wind' awkwardly. In a technical interview: "Windmill lets us write scripts in Python or TypeScript and wire them into multi-step flows with a visual editor."