Come on, kadioguy, what do you think he said? Would 'presidency make any sense?

Student or Learner
(At 7:04)
Which of the following do you think he pronounces?
(a) Thank you very much, President Xi, for welcoming me to Taiwan today.
(b) Thank you very much, Presidency, for welcoming me to Taiwan today.
I am not a teacher. If there is anything ungrammatical in my post, please correct it. I am grateful for your help.
Come on, kadioguy, what do you think he said? Would 'presidency make any sense?
Typoman - writer of rongs
The stress pattern is 'President X';; rather than' presidency' even if Xi is mispronounced.
Typoman - writer of rongs
NOT A TEACHER
1. My 83-year-old ears definitely heard "presidency."
2. He could not have said "Xi," for President Xi is the leader of the People's Republic of China (the mainland). Surely, he would have known that.
3. The lady is President Tsai, the leader of the Republic of China (Taiwan). (The word "People's" makes all the difference.)
4. I have no idea why Secretary Azar used the word "presidency." I can only guess that he thought that he was being very respectful in using that term.
*****
Is it possible that he mispronounced "Tsai"?
Last edited by TheParser; 10-Aug-2020 at 22:44.
I think he was having a stab at pronouncing "Xi" but it sounds as if he said "President Tzi" or "President Zee". Those can easily be mistaken for "presidency".
Remember - if you don't use correct capitalisation, punctuation and spacing, anything you write will be incorrect.
According to this source, he simply botched his first attempt at 'Tsai', saying something closer to 'shee' instead of 'ts eye'. He gets it right a few moments later at about 7:37.
Wear short sleeves! Support your right to bare arms!
But it doesn't strike me as fair to accuse him of confusing her with the president of mainland China. He doesn't call her by his name.
I clearly heard him say "tsee" rather than "Tsai", a simple mispronounciation to my ears. He did run the title and name together.
Retired magazine editor and native British English speaker - not a teacher