Learn to say popular webhook testing and inspection tool names correctly.
0 / 5 completed
1 / 5
How is Ngrok (tool for exposing local servers to the internet for webhook testing) correctly pronounced?
Ngrok is pronounced 'EN-grok' — 'N' spoken as a letter plus 'grok' (to understand deeply). Stress on EN. In a technical interview: "Ngrok gave my laptop a public URL so Stripe could send webhook events straight to it."
2 / 5
How is Webhook.site (tool for inspecting and testing incoming webhook payloads) correctly pronounced?
Webhook.site is pronounced 'WEB-hook-dot-SYT' — 'webhook' plus 'dot site', both plain English. In a technical interview: "Webhook.site let me see the exact JSON payload GitHub was sending before I wrote any code."
3 / 5
How is Hookdeck (webhook infrastructure and event gateway platform) correctly pronounced?
Hookdeck is pronounced 'HOOK-dek' — 'hook' (like a webhook) plus 'deck'. Stress on HOOK. In a technical interview: "Hookdeck retried the failed webhook delivery automatically until our server came back up."
4 / 5
How is Svix (webhook sending and management infrastructure) correctly pronounced?
Svix is pronounced 'ES-viks' — the leading S and V are separated slightly, rhymes with 'six'. In a technical interview: "Svix signed every outgoing webhook so customers could verify it really came from us."
5 / 5
How is Beeceptor (mock API and webhook inspection tool) correctly pronounced?
Beeceptor is pronounced 'bee-SEP-ter' — blends 'B' and 'interceptor', stress on SEP. In a technical interview: "Beeceptor mocked the third-party API response so we could test the webhook handler offline."