It turns out choosy graphics creators also choose "JIF."

During Tuesday's annual Webby Awards ceremony, GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) creator Steve Wilhite put to rest the question of the animated images' correct pronunciation.

The simple answer: Much like the peanut butter brand, it's a soft "G."

Wilhite accepted a lifetime achievement award at the Webby's, which require winners to limit their acceptance speeches to five words.

"Instead of speaking his five words tonight, Steve is using his own invention to accept his award," Tumblr founder David Karp said in introducing him (video below).

To the tune of Richard Strauss's "Also Sprach Zarathustra" (a.k.a. the famed 2001: A Space Odyssey notes), five words slowly appeared on the screen above Wilhite: "It's pronounced 'JIF' not 'GIF.'" The audience laughed and cheered as Wilhite quietly walked away.

The debate has been raging for years, like a Bugs Bunny-vs-Donald Duck tussle  most PC users pronounce the soft letter, while Mac owners seem to prefer the harder G. Even the White House decreed that GIF gets a "hard G."

As Gizmodo pointed out, the English language calls for the hard G sound when an I, E, or Y follow the letter. But should the acronym, which begins with the hard-G word "Graphics," be an exception? Not according to Wilhite.

"The Oxford English Dictionary accepts both pronunciations," Wilhite told the New York Times this week. "They are wrong. It's a soft 'G,' pronounced 'jif.' End of story."

Wilhite created the Graphics Interchange Format in 1987, providing a bitmapped graphics file that has recently made its Internet resurgence among meme-loving bloggers.

For more, see PCMag's How to Make Animated GIFs, as well as The Latest Adventures of Animated GIFs slideshow above.