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Pronunciation of English ⟨th⟩

In English, the digraph ⟨th⟩ represents in most cases either one or the other of two phonemes: the voiced dental fricative /ð/ (as in this) and the voiceless dental fricative /θ/ (as in thing). Occasionally, it stands for /t/ (as in Thailand, or Thomas) or the cluster /tθ/ (as in eighth). In compound words, ⟨th⟩ may be a consonant sequence rather than a digraph (as in the /t.h/ of lighthouse).

General description edit

In standard English, the phonetic realization of the two dental fricative phonemes shows less variation than many other English consonants. Both are pronounced either interdentally, i.e. with the blade of the tongue resting against the lower part of the back of the upper teeth and the tip protruding slightly, or with the tip of the tongue against the back of the upper teeth. For some speakers these two positions are in free variation, while for other speakers they are in complementary distribution, the position behind the teeth being used when the dental fricative stands in proximity to an alveolar fricative /s/ or /z/, as in myths (/θs/) or clothes (/ðz/). Lip configuration may vary depending on phonetic context. The vocal folds are abducted. The velopharyngeal port is closed. Air forced between tongue surface and cutting edge of the upper teeth (interdental) or inside surface of the teeth (dental) creates audible frictional turbulence.

The difference between /θ/ and /ð/ is normally described as a voiceless–voiced contrast, as this is the aspect native speakers are most aware of. However, the two phonemes are also distinguished by other phonetic markers. There is a difference of energy (see: Fortis and lenis), the fortis /θ/ being pronounced with more muscular tension than the lenis /ð/. Also, /θ/ is more strongly aspirated than /ð/, as can be demonstrated by holding a hand a few centimeters in front of the mouth and noticing the differing force of the puff of air created by the articulatory process.

Phonology and distribution edit

In modern English, /θ/ and /ð/ bear a phonemic relationship to each other, as is demonstrated by the presence of a small number of minimal pairs: thigh:thy, ether:either, teeth:teethe. Thus they are distinct phonemes (units of sound, differences in which can affect meaning), as opposed to allophones (different pronunciations of a phoneme having no effect on meaning). They are distinguished from the neighbouring labiodental fricatives, sibilants and alveolar stops by such minimal pairs as thought:fought/sought/taught and then:Venn/Zen/den.

The vast majority of words in English with ⟨th⟩ have /θ/, and almost all newly created words do. However, the constant recurrence of the function words, particularly the, means that /ð/ is nevertheless more frequent in actual use.

The distribution pattern may be summed up in the following rule of thumb, which is valid in most cases: in an initial position, /θ/ is used except in certain function words; in a medial position, /ð/ is used except for certain foreign loan words; and in final position, /θ/ is used except in certain verbs. A more detailed explanation follows.

Initial position edit

  • Almost all words beginning with a dental fricative have /θ/.
  • A small number of common function words (the Middle English anomalies mentioned below) begin with /ð/. The words in this group are:
    • 1 definite article: the
    • 4 demonstratives: this, that, these, those
    • 2 personal pronouns each with multiple forms: thou, thee, thy, thine, thyself; they, them, their, theirs, themselves, themself
    • 7 adverbs and conjunctions: there, then, than, thus, though, thence, thither (though in the United States thence and thither may be pronounced with initial /θ/[1])
    • Various compound adverbs based on the above words: therefore, thereupon, thereby, thereafter, thenceforth, etc.
  • A few words have an initial ⟨th⟩ for /t/ (e.g. Thomas): see below.

Medial position edit

  • Most native words with a medial ⟨th⟩ have /ð/.
    • Between vowels (including r-colored vowels), followed by a weak vowel: heathen, farthing, fathom, Worthington; and the frequent combination -ther-: bother, brother, dither, either, farther, father, further, heather, lather, mother, northern, other, rather, smithereens, slither, southern, together, weather, whether, wither; Caruthers, Netherlands, Witherspoon.
    • Followed by /r/: brethren.
  • A few native words have a medial /θ/:
    • The suffixes -y, -ly, -ing and -ed normally leave terminal /θ/ unchanged: earthy, healthy, pithy, stealthy, wealthy, bothy (from booth); fourthly, monthly; earthing; frothed; but worthy and swarthy have /ð/.
    • Some plurals have /θs/, as discussed in more detail below: cloths, baths etc.
    • Compound words in which the first element ends or the second element begins with ⟨th⟩ frequently have /θ/, as these elements would in isolation: bathroom, Southampton; anything, everything, nothing, something.
    • The only other native words with medial /θ/ would seem to be brothel (usually) and Ethel.
  • Most loan words with a medial ⟨th⟩ have /θ/.
    • From Greek: Agatha, anthem, atheist, Athens, athlete, cathedral, Catherine, Cathy, enthusiasm, ether, ethics, ethnic, lethal, lithium, mathematics, method, methyl, mythical, panther, pathetic, sympathy
    • From Latin: author, authority (though in Latin these had /t/; see below). Also names borrowed from or via Latin: Bertha, Gothic, Hathaway, Othello, Parthian
    • From Celtic languages: Arthur (Welsh has /θ/ medially: /ærθɨr/); Abernathy, Abernethy, as an anglicization, though Gaelic has no /θ/.
    • From Hebrew: Ethan, Jonathan, Bethlehem, Bethany, Leviathan, Bethel
    • From German: Luther, as an anglicized spelling pronunciation (see below).
  • Loanwords with medial /ð/:
    • Greek words with the combination -thm-: algorithm, logarithm, rhythm. Exception : arithmetic /əˈrɪθmətɪk/. The word asthma may be pronounced /ˈæzðmə/ or /ˈæsθmə/, though here the ⟨th⟩ is usually silent.
  • A few words have a medial ⟨th⟩ for /t/ or /th/ (e.g. lighthouse): see below.

Final position edit

  • Nouns and adjectives
    • Nouns and adjectives ending in a dental fricative usually have /θ/: bath, breath, cloth, froth, health, hearth, loath, mouth, sheath, sooth, tooth/teeth, width, wreath.
    • Exceptions are usually marked in the spelling with a silent ⟨e⟩: tithe, lathe, lithe with /ð/.
    • blithe can have either /ð/ or /θ/. booth has /ð/ in England but /θ/ in America.
  • Verbs
    • Verbs ending in a dental fricative usually have /ð/, and are frequently spelled with a silent ⟨e⟩: bathe, breathe, clothe, loathe, scathe, scythe, seethe, sheathe, soothe, teethe, tithe, wreathe, writhe. Spelled without ⟨e⟩: mouth (verb) nevertheless has /ð/.
    • froth has /θ/ whether as a noun or as a verb.
    • The verb endings -s, -ing, -ed do not change the pronunciation of a ⟨th⟩ in the final position in the stem: bathe has /ð/, therefore so do bathed, bathing, bathes; frothing has /θ/. Likewise clothing used as a noun, scathing as an adjective etc.
    • The archaic verb inflection "-eth" has /θ/.
  • Others
    • with has either /θ/ or /ð/ (see below), as do its compounds: within, without, outwith, withdraw, withhold, withstand, wherewithal, etc.

Plurals edit

  • Plural ⟨s⟩ after ⟨th⟩ may be realized as either /ðz/ or /θs/:
    • Some plural nouns ending in ⟨ths⟩, with a preceding vowel, have /ðz/, although the singulars always have /θ/; however, a variant in /θs/ will be found for many of these: baths, mouths, oaths, paths, sheaths, truths, wreaths, youths exist in both varieties; clothes always has /ðz/ (if not pronounced /kloʊz/[2]).
    • Others have only /θs/: azimuths, breaths, cloths, deaths, faiths, Goths, growths, mammoths, moths, myths, smiths, sloths, zeniths, etc. This includes all words in 'th' preceded by a consonant (earths, hearths, lengths, months, widths, etc.) and all numeric words, whether preceded by vowel or consonant (fourths, fifths, sixths, sevenths, eighths /eɪtθs/, twelfths, fifteenths, twentieths, hundredths /hʌndrədθs/, thousandths).
    • Booth has /ð/ in the singular and hence /ðz/ in the plural for most speakers in England.[citation needed] In American English, it has /θ/ in the singular and /θs/ or /ðz/ in the plural. This pronunciation also prevails in Scotland.

Grammatical alternation edit

In pairs of related words, an alternation between /θ/ and /ð/ is possible, which may be thought of as a kind of consonant mutation. Typically [θ] appears in the singular of a noun, [ð] in the plural and in the related verb: cloth /θ/, clothes /ð/, to clothe /ð/. This is directly comparable to the /s/-/z/ or /f/-/v/ alternation in house, houses or wolf, wolves. It goes back to the allophonic variation in Old English (see below), where it was possible for ⟨þ⟩ to be in final position and thus voiceless in the basic form of a word, but in medial position and voiced in a related form. The loss of inflections then brought the voiced medial consonant to the end of the word. Often a remnant of the old inflection can be seen in the spelling in the form of a silent ⟨e⟩, which may be thought of synchronically as a marker of the voicing.

Regional differences in distribution edit

The above discussion follows Daniel Jones' English Pronouncing Dictionary, an authority on standard British English, and Webster's New World College Dictionary, an authority on American English. Usage appears much the same between the two. Regional variation within standard English includes the following:

  • The final consonant in with is pronounced /θ/ (its original pronunciation) in northern Britain, but /ð/ in the south, though some speakers of Southern British English use /θ/ before a voiceless consonant and /ð/ before a voiced one. A 1993 postal poll of American English speakers showed that 84% use /θ/, while 16% have /ð/ (Shitara 1993). (The variant with /ð/ is presumably a sandhi development.)
  • In Scottish English, /θ/ is found in many words which have /ð/ further south. The phenomenon of nouns terminating in /θ/ taking plurals in /ðz/ does not occur in the north. Thus the following have /θs/: baths, mouths (noun), truths. Scottish English does have the termination /ðz/ in verb forms, however, such as bathes, mouths (verb), loathes, and also in the noun clothes, which can be realized without /ð/. Scottish English also has /θ/ in with, booth, thence etc., and the Scottish pronunciation of thither, almost uniquely, has both /θ/ and /ð/ in the same word. Where there is an American-British difference, the North of Britain generally agrees with the United States on this phoneme pair.
  • Some dialects of American English use /ð/ at the beginning of the word "thank".

History of the English phonemes edit

Germanic origins edit

Proto-Indo-European (PIE) had no dental fricatives, but these evolved in the earliest stages of the Germanic languages. In Proto-Germanic, /ð/ and /θ/ were separate phonemes, usually represented in Germanic studies by the symbols *đ and *þ.

  • *đ (/ð/) was derived by Grimm's law from PIE *dʰ or by Verner's law (i.e. when immediately following an unstressed syllable) from PIE *t.
  • *þ (/θ/) was derived by Grimm's law from PIE *t.

In West Germanic, the Proto-Germanic *đ shifted further to *d, leaving only one dental fricative phoneme. However, a new [ð] appeared as an allophone of /θ/ in medial positions by assimilation of the voicing of the surrounding vowels. [θ] remained in initial and presumably in final positions (though later terminal devoicing would in any case have eliminated the evidence of final [ð]). This West Germanic phoneme, complete with its distribution of allophones, survived into Old English. In German and Dutch, it shifted to a /d/, the allophonic distinction simply being lost. In German, West Germanic *d shifted to /t/ in what may be thought of as a chain shift, but in Dutch, *þ, *đ and *d merged into a single /d/.

The whole complex of Germanic dentals, and the place of the fricatives within it, can be summed up in this table:

PIE Proto-Germanic West Germanic Old English German Dutch Notes
*t *[þ] [θ] /d/ /d/ Original *t in initial position, or in final position after a stressed vowel
*[đ] [ð] Original *t in medial position after a stressed vowel
*d /d/ /t/ Original *t after an unstressed vowel
*dʰ Original *dʰ in all positions
*d *t *t /t/ /s/ or /ts/ /t/ Original *d in all positions

Note that this table shows only the basic rules. The actual developments in all of the mentioned languages are more complicated (due to dialectal variation, peculiar developments in consonant clusters, etc.). For more on these phonemes from a comparative perspective, see Grammatischer Wechsel. For the developments in German and Dutch see High German consonant shift.

Old English edit

Thus English inherited a phoneme /θ/ in positions where other West Germanic languages have /d/ and most other Indo-European languages have /t/: English three, German drei, Latin tres.

In Old English, the phoneme /θ/, like all fricative phonemes in the language, had two allophones, one voiced and one voiceless, which were distributed regularly according to phonetic environment.

  • [ð] (like [v] and [z]) was used between two voiced sounds (either vowels or voiced consonants).
  • [θ] (like [f] and [s]) was spoken in initial and final position, and also medially if adjacent to another unvoiced consonant.

Although Old English had two graphemes to represent these sounds, ⟨þ⟩ (thorn) and ⟨ð⟩ (eth), it used them interchangeably, unlike Old Icelandic, which used ⟨þ⟩ for /θ/ and ⟨ð⟩ for /ð/.

Development up to Modern English edit

The most important development on the way to modern English was the investing of the existing distinction between [ð] and [θ] with phonemic value. Minimal pairs, and hence the phonological independence of the two phones, developed as a result of three main processes.

  1. In early Middle English times, a group of very common function words beginning with /θ/ (the, they, there, etc.) came to be pronounced with /ð/ instead of /θ/. Possibly this was a sandhi development; as these words are frequently found in unstressed positions, they can sometimes appear to run on from the preceding word, which may have resulted in the dental fricative being treated as though it were word-internal. This allowed a word-initial minimal pair like thigh:thy.
  2. English has borrowed many words from Greek, including a vast number of scientific terms. Where the original Greek had the letter ⟨θ⟩ (theta), English usually retained the Late Greek pronunciation regardless of phonetic environment, resulting in the presence of /θ/ in medial position (anthem, methyl, etc.). This allowed a medial minimal pair like ether:either.
  3. English has lost its original verb inflections. When the stem of a verb ends with a dental fricative, this was usually followed by a vowel in Old English, and was therefore voiced. It is still voiced in modern English, even though the verb inflection has disappeared leaving the /ð/ at the end of the word. Examples are to bathe, to mouth, to breathe. Sometimes a remnant of the original vowel remained in the spelling (see: Silent e), but this was inconsistent. This allowed a minimal pair in final position like loath:loathe.

Other changes that affected these phonemes included a shift /d//ð/ when followed by unstressed suffix -er. Thus Old English fæder became modern English father; likewise mother, gather, hither, together, weather (from mōdor, gaderian, hider, tōgædere, weder). In a reverse process, Old English byrþen and morþor or myþra become burden and murder (compare the obsolete variants burthen and murther).

Dialectally, the alternation between /d/ and /ð/ sometimes extends to other words, as bladder, ladder, solder with /ð/ (possibly being restricted elsewhere by the former two clashing with blather and lather). On the other hand, some dialects retain original d, and extend it to other words, as brother, further, rather. The Welsh name Llewelyn appears in older English texts as Thlewelyn (Rolls of Parliament (Rotuli parliamentorum) I. 463/1, King Edward I or II), and Fluellen (Shakespeare, Henry V). Th also occurs dialectally for wh, as in thirl, thortleberry, thorl, for whirl, whortleberry, whorl. Conversely, Scots has whaing, whang, white, whittle, for thwaing, thwang, thwite, thwittle.

The old verb inflection -eth (Old English -eþ) was replaced by -s (he singeth → he sings), not a sound shift but a completely new inflection, the origin of which is still being debated. Possibilities include alveolarization (since s is easier to pronounce there than th), or displacement by a nonstandard English dialect.

Dialectal realizations edit

In some dialects the "th"-sound phonemes /θ/ and /ð/ are pronounced differently from the dental fricatives [θ] and [ð]. Most common are: substitution with labiodental fricatives [f] and [v] (fronting), substitution with alveolar stops [t] and [d] (stopping), and substitution with alveolar fricatives [s] and [z] (alveolarization). Fronting and stopping are more common among speakers of English dialects, whereas alveolarization is more common among language learners whose first languages are French, German, or Mandarin. To speakers of varieties in which /θ/ and /ð/ are pronounced [θ] and [ð], fronting and stopping are generally considered to have less of a marked contrast with the standard pronunciation than alveolarization, which is often more stigmatized.

A fourth, less common substitution is [h] for /θ/ word-initially or intervocalically. This is called debuccalization, and somewhat prevalent in Scottish English.

th-fronting edit

In some areas, such as London, and certain dialects, including African American Vernacular English and less commonly New Zealand, many people realize the phonemes /θ/ and /ð/ as [f] and [v], respectively. Although traditionally stigmatized as typical of a Cockney accent, this pronunciation is fairly widespread, especially when immediately surrounded by other fricatives for ease of pronunciation, and has, in the early 20th century, become an increasingly noticeable feature of the Estuary English accent of South East England. It has in at least one case been transferred into standard English as a neologism: a bovver boy is a thug, a "boy" who likes "bother" (fights). Joe Brown and his Bruvvers was a Pop group of the 1960s. The song "Fings ain't wot they used t'be" was the title song of a 1959 Cockney comedy. Similarly, a New Zealander from the northernmost parts of the country might state that he or she is from "Norfland".

Note that, at least in Cockney, a word beginning with /ð/ (as opposed to its voiceless counterpart /θ/) can never be labiodental. Instead, it is realized as any of [ð, ð̞, d, l, ʔ], or is dropped altogether.[3][4]

th-stopping edit

Many speakers of African American Vernacular English, Caribbean English, Liberian English, Nigerian English, Philadelphia English, and Philippine English (along with other Asian English varieties) pronounce the fricatives /θ, ð/ as alveolar stops [t, d]. Similarly, but still distinctly, many speakers of New York City English, Chicago English, Boston English, Indian English, Newfoundland English, and Hiberno-English use the dental stops [t̪, d̪] (typically distinct from alveolar [t, d]) instead of, or in free variation with, [θ, ð].

In Cockney, the th-stopping may occur when a word begins with /ð/ (but not its voiceless counterpart /θ/).[3][4] This is also associated with the accent of the English city of Sheffield (such as the nickname dee-dahs for residents) but such pronunciations are now confined to the very oldest residents of Sheffield.[5]

th-alveolarization edit

Th-alveolarization is a process that occurs in some African varieties of English where the dental fricatives /θ, ð/ merge with the alveolar fricatives /s/ and /z/. It is an example of assibilation.

In rarer or older varieties of African American Vernacular English, /θ/ may be pronounced [s] after a vowel and before another consonant, as in bathroom [ˈbæsɹum].[6]

Th-alveolarization is often parodied as typical of French- and German-speaking learners of English, but it is widespread among many other foreign learners because the dental fricative "th" sounds are not very common among the world's languages. Due to the said ridicule, learners who are unable to realize these sounds sometimes opt for the less marked th-fronting or th-stopping instead of alveolarization.[citation needed]

Homophonous pairs
/s, z/ /θ, ð/ IPA Notes
ace eighth ˈeɪs eighth more often merges with eights (see below)
bass bath ˈbæs bass, the fish; but distinct in dialects with broad A
Bess Beth ˈbɛs
breeze breathe ˈbɹiːz
close clothe ˈkloʊz
close clothes ˈkloʊz
eights eighth ˈeɪts
Erse earth ˈɜː(r)s
face faith ˈfeɪs
force forth ˈfoə(r)s
force fourth ˈfoə(r)s
frost frothed ˈfrɒst, ˈfrɔːst
gross growth ˈɡroʊs
kiss kith ˈkɪs
lays lathe ˈleɪz
laze lathe ˈleɪz
lies lithe ˈlaɪz
louse Louth ˈlaʊs
lyse lithe ˈlaɪz
mass math ˈmæs
mess meth ˈmɛs
miss myth ˈmɪs
months month ˈmʌns
moss moth ˈmɒs, ˈmɔːs
mouse mouth ˈmaʊs
pass path ˈpæs, ˈpɑːs
piss pith ˈpɪs
purse Perth ˈpɜː(r)s
race wraith ˈreɪs
rise writhe ˈraɪz
Ross Roth ˈrɒs, ˈrɔːs
ryes writhe ˈraɪz
sai thigh ˈsaɪ
sane thane ˈseɪn
sane thegn ˈseɪn
sank thank ˈsæŋk
saw thaw ˈsɔː
saw Thor ˈsɔː In most Non-rhotic accents; specifically those without the Cot-caught merger.
seam theme ˈsiːm
seas seethe ˈsiːz
seem theme ˈsiːm
sees seethe ˈsiːz
seize seethe ˈsiːz
sick thick ˈsɪk
sigh thigh ˈsaɪ
sin thin ˈsɪn
sing thing ˈsɪŋ
sink think ˈsɪŋk
six sixth ˈsɪks
size scythe ˈsaɪz
soar thaw ˈsɔː Non-rhotic acents with horse-hoarse merger.
soar Thor ˈsɔː(r) With horse-hoarse merger.
soared thawed ˈsɔːd Non-rhotic accents with horse-hoarse merger.
some thumb ˈsʌm
song thong ˈsɒŋ, ˈsɔːŋ
sore thaw ˈsɔː Non-rhotic accents with horse-hoarse merger.
sore Thor ˈsɔː(r) With horse-hoarse merger.
sored thawed ˈsɔːd Non-rhotic accents with horse-hoarse merger.
sort thought ˈsɔːt Non-rhotic accents.
sought thought ˈsɔːt
suds thuds ˈsʌdz
sum thumb ˈsʌm
sump thump ˈsʌmp
sunder thunder ˈsʌndə(r)
sunk thunk ˈsʌŋk
swart thwart ˈswɔː(r)t
sword thawed ˈsɔːd Non-rhotic accents with horse-hoarse merger.
tense tenth ˈtɛns
tents tenth ˈtɛn(t)s
truce truth ˈtruːs
use (n) youth ˈjuːs
whiz with ˈwɪz With wine-whine merger.
wizard withered ˈwɪzə(r)d
worse worth ˈwə(r)s
wrasse wrath ˈræs
wreath Reece ˈriːs
wreath Rhys ˈriːs
Z; zee the ˈziː The before vowels and silent H; but distinct in dialects where Z is [zɛd]
Z; zee thee ˈziː but distinct in dialects where Z is [zɛd]
Zs; zees these ˈziːz
zen then ˈzɛn

th-debuccalization edit

In many varieties of Scottish English, /θ/ becomes [h] word initially and intervocalically.[7]

Th-debuccalization occurs mainly in Glasgow and across the Central Belt. A common example is [hɪŋk] for think. This feature is becoming more common in these places over time, but is still variable.[citation needed] In word final position, [θ] is used, as in standard English.

The existence of local [h] for /θ/ in Glasgow complicates the process of th-fronting there, a process which gives [f] for historical /θ/. Unlike in the other dialects with th-fronting, where [f] solely varies with [θ], in Glasgow, the introduction of th-fronting there creates a three-way variant system of [h], [f] and [θ].

Use of [θ] marks the local educated norms (the regional standard), while use of [h] and [f] instead mark the local non-standard norms. [h] is well known in Glasgow as a vernacular variant of /θ/ when it occurs at the start of a word and intervocalically, while [f] has only recently risen above the level of social consciousness.

Given that th-fronting is a relatively recent innovation in Glasgow, it was expected that linguists might find evidence for lexical diffusion for [f] and the results found from Glaswegian speakers confirm this.[citation needed] The existing and particular lexical distribution of th-debuccalization imposes special constraints on the progress of th-fronting in Glasgow.

In accents with th-debuccalization, the cluster /θr/ becomes [hr],[citation needed] giving these dialects a consonant cluster that does not occur in other dialects. The replacement of /θr/ with [hr] leads to pronunciations like:

  • three – [hri]
  • throw – [hro]
  • through, threw – [hrʉ]
  • thrash – [hraʃ]
  • thresh – [hrɛʃ]
  • thrown, throne – [hron]
  • thread – [hrɛd]
  • threat – [hrɛt]

Assimilation edit

As with many English consonants, a process of assimilation can result in the substitution of other speech sounds in certain phonetic environments. Native speakers do this subconsciously.

At word boundaries, alveolar stops next to dental fricatives assimilate very regularly, especially in rapid colloquial speech, involving both the place of articulation and the manner of articulation: the alveolar stops become dental, while the dental fricatives become stops.[8][9][10][11] The resulting consonant is usually long (geminated) which may be the only audible cue for the speaker to distinguish particular words (for example, the definite and indefinite articles, compare "run the mile" [ˈɹʌn̪ n̪ə ˈmaɪl] and "run a mile" [ˈɹʌn ə ˈmaɪl]).[11]

in the: /ɪn ðə/[ɪn̪ n̪ə]
join the army: /ˈdʒɔɪn ði ˈɑːmi/[ˈdʒɔɪn̪ n̪i ˈɑːmi]
read these: /riːd ðiːz/[ɹiːd̪ d̪iːz]
right there: /raɪt ˈðɛə/[ɹaɪt̪ ˈt̪ɛə] (more commonly: [ɹaɪʔ ˈðɛə], with a glottal stop)
fail the test: /ˈfeɪl ðə ˈtɛst/[ˈfeɪl̪ l̪ə ˈtɛst]

The alveolar fricatives may become dental as well:[11]

this thing: /ðɪs θɪŋ/[ðɪs̪ θɪŋ] or [ðɪs̪ s̪ɪŋ]
takes them: /teɪks ðəm/[teɪks̪ ðm̩] or [teɪks̪ s̪m̩]
was this: /wɒz ðɪs/[wɒz̪ ðɪs] or [wɒz̪ z̪ɪs]

/θ/ and /ð/ can also be lost through elision:[12][13] months [mʌns], clothes [kloʊz]. In rapid speech, sixth(s) may be pronounced like six.[14] Them may be contracted to 'em, and in this case the contraction is often indicated in writing. Some linguists see 'em as originally a separate word, a remnant of Old English hem, but as the apostrophe shows, it is perceived in modern English as a contraction of them.[15]

Acquisition problems edit

Children generally learn the less marked phonemes of the language before the more marked ones. In the case of English-speaking children, /θ/ and /ð/ are often among the last phonemes to be learnt, frequently not being mastered before the age of five. Prior to this age, many children substitute the sounds [f] and [v] respectively. For small children, fought and thought are therefore homophones. As British and American children begin school at age four and five respectively, this means that many are learning to read and write before they have sorted out these sounds, and the infantile pronunciation is frequently reflected in their spelling errors: ve fing for the thing.

Children with a lisp, however, have trouble distinguishing /θ/ and /ð/ from /s/ and /z/ respectively in speech, using a single /θ/ or /ð/ pronunciation for both, and may never master the correct sounds without speech therapy. The lisp is a common speech impediment in English.

Foreign learners may have parallel problems. Learners from very many cultural backgrounds have difficulties with English dental fricatives, usually caused by interference with either sibilants or stops. Words with a dental fricative adjacent to an alveolar fricative, such as clothes (/kloʊðz/ or /kloʊz/), truths /tɹuθs/, fifths (/fɪfθs/ or /fɪθs/), sixths (/sɪksθs/), anesthetic (/ˌænəsˈθɛtɪk/), etc., are commonly very difficult for foreign learners to pronounce. Some of these words containing consonant clusters can also be difficult for native speakers, including those using the standard /θ/ and /ð/ pronunciations generally, allowing such accepted informal pronunciations of clothes as /kloʊz/ (a homophone of the verb close) and fifth(s) as /fɪθ(s)/.

History of the digraph edit

⟨th⟩ for /θ/ and /ð/ edit

Though English speakers take it for granted, the digraph ⟨th⟩ is in fact not an obvious combination for a dental fricative. The origins of this have to do with developments in Greek.

Proto-Indo-European had an aspirated /dʱ/ that came into Greek as /tʰ/, spelled with the letter theta. In the Greek of Homer and Plato, this was still pronounced /tʰ/, and therefore when Greek words were borrowed into Latin, theta was transcribed with ⟨th⟩. Since /tʰ/ sounds like /t/ with a following puff of air, ⟨th⟩ was the logical spelling in the Latin alphabet.

By the time of New Testament Greek (koiné), however, the aspirated stop had shifted to a fricative: /tʰ/→/θ/. Thus theta came to have the sound that it still has in Modern Greek, and which it represents in the IPA. From a Latin perspective, the established digraph ⟨th⟩ now represented the voiceless fricative /θ/, and was used thus for English by French-speaking scribes after the Norman Conquest, since they were unfamiliar with the Germanic graphemes ð (eth) and þ (thorn). Likewise, the spelling ⟨th⟩ was used for /θ/ in Old High German prior to the completion of the High German consonant shift, again by analogy with the way Latin represented the Greek sound. It also appeared in early modern Swedish before a final shift to /d/.

The history of the digraphs ⟨ph⟩ for /f/ and ⟨ch⟩ for Scots, Welsh or German /x/ is parallel.

⟨th⟩ for /t/ edit

Since neither /tʰ/ nor /θ/ was a native sound in Latin, the tendency emerged at the latest in medieval Latin, to substitute /t/. Thus, in many modern languages, including French and German, the ⟨th⟩ digraph is used in Greek loan-words to represent an original /θ/, but is now pronounced /t/: examples are French théâtre, German Theater. In some cases, this etymological ⟨th⟩, which has no remaining significance for pronunciation, has been transferred to words in which there is no etymological justification for it. For example, German Tal ('valley', cognate with English dale) appears in many place-names with an archaic spelling Thal (contrast Neandertal and Neanderthal). The German spelling reform of 1901 largely reversed these, but they remain in some proper nouns. The name Rothschild is an example of this, being a compound of rot[h] ("red") and Schild ("shield").

Examples of this are also to be found in English, perhaps influenced immediately by French. In some Middle English manuscripts, ⟨th⟩ appears for ⟨t⟩ or ⟨d⟩: tho 'to' or 'do', thyll till, whythe white, thede deed. In Modern English we see it in Esther, Thomas, Thames, thyme, Witham (the town in Essex, not the river in Lincolnshire which is pronounced with /ð/) and the old spelling of Satan as Sathan. More recently, the name of the capital of Nepal was often written Katmandu down to the late 20th century, but is now usually spelt Kathmandu.

In a small number of cases, this spelling later influenced the pronunciation: amaranth, amianthus and author have spelling pronunciations with /θ/, and some English speakers use /θ/ in Neanderthal.

⟨th⟩ for /th/ edit

A few English compound words, such as lightheaded or hothouse, have the letter combination ⟨th⟩ split between the parts, though this is not a digraph. Here, the ⟨t⟩ and ⟨h⟩ are pronounced separately (light-headed) as a cluster of two consonants. Other examples are anthill, goatherd, lighthouse, outhouse, pothead; also in words formed with the suffix -hood: knighthood, and the similarly formed Afrikaans loanword apartheid. In a few place names ending in t+ham, the t-h boundary has been lost and become a spelling pronunciation, for example Grantham.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ The American Heritage Dictionary, 1969.
  2. ^ Kenyon, John S.; Knott, Thomas A. (1953) [1944]. A Pronouncing Dictionary of American English. Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster. p. 87. ISBN 0-87779-047-7.
  3. ^ a b Wright (1981:137)
  4. ^ a b Wells (1982:329)
  5. ^ Stoddart, Upton and Widdowson in Urban Voices, Arnold, London, 1999, p. 79
  6. ^ Phonological Features of African American Vernacular English
  7. ^ Weber, Tobias (February 2014). Principles in the Emergence and Evolution of Linguistic Features in World Englishes. ISBN 9783954891917.
  8. ^ Roach, Peter (2009). English Phonetics and Phonology. Cambridge University Press. p. 112. ISBN 978-0-521-71740-3.
  9. ^ Gramley, Stephan; Pátzold, Michael (2004). A Survey of Modern English. Routledge. p. 76. ISBN 978-1-134-42046-9.
  10. ^ Collins, Beverley; Mees, Inger M. (2013). Practical Phonetics and Phonology: A Resource Book for Students. Routledge. p. 122. ISBN 978-0-415-50649-6.
  11. ^ a b c Shockey, Linda (2003). "2.5.1 ð-reduction". Sound Patterns of Spoken English. pp. 43–44. ISBN 9780470758243.
  12. ^ Bauer, Laurie; Lieber, Rochelle; Plag, Ingo (2015). The Oxford Reference Guide to English Morphology. Oxford University Press. p. 131. ISBN 978-0-19-874706-2.
  13. ^ Collins, Beverley; Mees, Inger M. (2013). Practical Phonetics and Phonology: A Resource Book for Students. Routledge. p. 127. ISBN 978-0-415-50649-6.
  14. ^ Jones, Daniel (2006). Roach, Peter; Hartman, James; Setter, Jane (eds.). "Introduction". Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary (17th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-68086-7.
  15. ^ Online Etymology Dictionary. 'em. Retrieved 18 September 2006.

Sources edit

  • Collins, Beverley; Mees, Inger M. (2013) [First published 2003], Practical Phonetics and Phonology: A Resource Book for Students (3rd ed.), Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-50650-2
  • Shitara, Yuko (1993). "A survey of American pronunciation preferences." Speech Hearing and Language 7: 201–32.
  • Wells, John C. (1982), Accents of English 2: The British Isles, Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-24224-X
  • Wright, Peter (1981), Cockney Dialect and Slang, London, England: B.T. Batsford Ltd.

pronunciation, english, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 201. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Pronunciation of English th news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA For the distinction between and see IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters In English the digraph th represents in most cases either one or the other of two phonemes the voiced dental fricative d as in this and the voiceless dental fricative 8 as in thing Occasionally it stands for t as in Thailand or Thomas or the cluster t8 as in eighth In compound words th may be a consonant sequence rather than a digraph as in the t h of lighthouse Contents 1 General description 2 Phonology and distribution 2 1 Initial position 2 2 Medial position 2 3 Final position 2 4 Plurals 2 5 Grammatical alternation 2 6 Regional differences in distribution 3 History of the English phonemes 3 1 Germanic origins 3 2 Old English 3 3 Development up to Modern English 4 Dialectal realizations 4 1 th fronting 4 2 th stopping 4 3 th alveolarization 4 4 th debuccalization 5 Assimilation 6 Acquisition problems 7 History of the digraph 7 1 th for 8 and d 7 2 th for t 7 3 th for th 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 SourcesGeneral description editIn standard English the phonetic realization of the two dental fricative phonemes shows less variation than many other English consonants Both are pronounced either interdentally i e with the blade of the tongue resting against the lower part of the back of the upper teeth and the tip protruding slightly or with the tip of the tongue against the back of the upper teeth For some speakers these two positions are in free variation while for other speakers they are in complementary distribution the position behind the teeth being used when the dental fricative stands in proximity to an alveolar fricative s or z as in myths 8s or clothes dz Lip configuration may vary depending on phonetic context The vocal folds are abducted The velopharyngeal port is closed Air forced between tongue surface and cutting edge of the upper teeth interdental or inside surface of the teeth dental creates audible frictional turbulence The difference between 8 and d is normally described as a voiceless voiced contrast as this is the aspect native speakers are most aware of However the two phonemes are also distinguished by other phonetic markers There is a difference of energy see Fortis and lenis the fortis 8 being pronounced with more muscular tension than the lenis d Also 8 is more strongly aspirated than d as can be demonstrated by holding a hand a few centimeters in front of the mouth and noticing the differing force of the puff of air created by the articulatory process Phonology and distribution editIn modern English 8 and d bear a phonemic relationship to each other as is demonstrated by the presence of a small number of minimal pairs thigh thy ether either teeth teethe Thus they are distinct phonemes units of sound differences in which can affect meaning as opposed to allophones different pronunciations of a phoneme having no effect on meaning They are distinguished from the neighbouring labiodental fricatives sibilants and alveolar stops by such minimal pairs as thought fought sought taught and then Venn Zen den The vast majority of words in English with th have 8 and almost all newly created words do However the constant recurrence of the function words particularly the means that d is nevertheless more frequent in actual use The distribution pattern may be summed up in the following rule of thumb which is valid in most cases in an initial position 8 is used except in certain function words in a medial position d is used except for certain foreign loan words and in final position 8 is used except in certain verbs A more detailed explanation follows Initial position edit Almost all words beginning with a dental fricative have 8 A small number of common function words the Middle English anomalies mentioned below begin with d The words in this group are 1 definite article the 4 demonstratives this that these those 2 personal pronouns each with multiple forms thou thee thy thine thyself they them their theirs themselves themself 7 adverbs and conjunctions there then than thus though thence thither though in the United States thence and thither may be pronounced with initial 8 1 Various compound adverbs based on the above words therefore thereupon thereby thereafter thenceforth etc A few words have an initial th for t e g Thomas see below Medial position edit Most native words with a medial th have d Between vowels including r colored vowels followed by a weak vowel heathen farthing fathom Worthington and the frequent combination ther bother brother dither either farther father further heather lather mother northern other rather smithereens slither southern together weather whether wither Caruthers Netherlands Witherspoon Followed by r brethren A few native words have a medial 8 The suffixes y ly ing and ed normally leave terminal 8 unchanged earthy healthy pithy stealthy wealthy bothy from booth fourthly monthly earthing frothed but worthy and swarthy have d Some plurals have 8s as discussed in more detail below cloths baths etc Compound words in which the first element ends or the second element begins with th frequently have 8 as these elements would in isolation bathroom Southampton anything everything nothing something The only other native words with medial 8 would seem to be brothel usually and Ethel Most loan words with a medial th have 8 From Greek Agatha anthem atheist Athens athlete cathedral Catherine Cathy enthusiasm ether ethics ethnic lethal lithium mathematics method methyl mythical panther pathetic sympathy From Latin author authority though in Latin these had t see below Also names borrowed from or via Latin Bertha Gothic Hathaway Othello Parthian From Celtic languages Arthur Welsh has 8 medially aer8ɨr Abernathy Abernethy as an anglicization though Gaelic has no 8 From Hebrew Ethan Jonathan Bethlehem Bethany Leviathan Bethel From German Luther as an anglicized spelling pronunciation see below Loanwords with medial d Greek words with the combination thm algorithm logarithm rhythm Exception arithmetic eˈrɪ8metɪk The word asthma may be pronounced ˈaezdme or ˈaes8me though here the th is usually silent A few words have a medial th for t or th e g lighthouse see below Final position edit Nouns and adjectives Nouns and adjectives ending in a dental fricative usually have 8 bath breath cloth froth health hearth loath mouth sheath sooth tooth teeth width wreath Exceptions are usually marked in the spelling with a silent e tithe lathe lithe with d blithe can have either d or 8 booth has d in England but 8 in America Verbs Verbs ending in a dental fricative usually have d and are frequently spelled with a silent e bathe breathe clothe loathe scathe scythe seethe sheathe soothe teethe tithe wreathe writhe Spelled without e mouth verb nevertheless has d froth has 8 whether as a noun or as a verb The verb endings s ing ed do not change the pronunciation of a th in the final position in the stem bathe has d therefore so do bathed bathing bathes frothing has 8 Likewise clothing used as a noun scathing as an adjective etc The archaic verb inflection eth has 8 Others with has either 8 or d see below as do its compounds within without outwith withdraw withhold withstand wherewithal etc Plurals edit Plural s after th may be realized as either dz or 8s Some plural nouns ending in ths with a preceding vowel have dz although the singulars always have 8 however a variant in 8s will be found for many of these baths mouths oaths paths sheaths truths wreaths youths exist in both varieties clothes always has dz if not pronounced kloʊz 2 Others have only 8s azimuths breaths cloths deaths faiths Goths growths mammoths moths myths smiths sloths zeniths etc This includes all words in th preceded by a consonant earths hearths lengths months widths etc and all numeric words whether preceded by vowel or consonant fourths fifths sixths sevenths eighths eɪt8s twelfths fifteenths twentieths hundredths hʌndred8s thousandths Booth has d in the singular and hence dz in the plural for most speakers in England citation needed In American English it has 8 in the singular and 8s or dz in the plural This pronunciation also prevails in Scotland Grammatical alternation edit In pairs of related words an alternation between 8 and d is possible which may be thought of as a kind of consonant mutation Typically 8 appears in the singular of a noun d in the plural and in the related verb cloth 8 clothes d to clothe d This is directly comparable to the s z or f v alternation in house houses or wolf wolves It goes back to the allophonic variation in Old English see below where it was possible for th to be in final position and thus voiceless in the basic form of a word but in medial position and voiced in a related form The loss of inflections then brought the voiced medial consonant to the end of the word Often a remnant of the old inflection can be seen in the spelling in the form of a silent e which may be thought of synchronically as a marker of the voicing Regional differences in distribution edit The above discussion follows Daniel Jones English Pronouncing Dictionary an authority on standard British English and Webster s New World College Dictionary an authority on American English Usage appears much the same between the two Regional variation within standard English includes the following The final consonant in with is pronounced 8 its original pronunciation in northern Britain but d in the south though some speakers of Southern British English use 8 before a voiceless consonant and d before a voiced one A 1993 postal poll of American English speakers showed that 84 use 8 while 16 have d Shitara 1993 The variant with d is presumably a sandhi development In Scottish English 8 is found in many words which have d further south The phenomenon of nouns terminating in 8 taking plurals in dz does not occur in the north Thus the following have 8s baths mouths noun truths Scottish English does have the termination dz in verb forms however such as bathes mouths verb loathes and also in the noun clothes which can be realized without d Scottish English also has 8 in with booth thence etc and the Scottish pronunciation of thither almost uniquely has both 8 and d in the same word Where there is an American British difference the North of Britain generally agrees with the United States on this phoneme pair Some dialects of American English use d at the beginning of the word thank History of the English phonemes editGermanic origins edit Proto Indo European PIE had no dental fricatives but these evolved in the earliest stages of the Germanic languages In Proto Germanic d and 8 were separate phonemes usually represented in Germanic studies by the symbols đ and th đ d was derived by Grimm s law from PIE dʰ or by Verner s law i e when immediately following an unstressed syllable from PIE t th 8 was derived by Grimm s law from PIE t In West Germanic the Proto Germanic đ shifted further to d leaving only one dental fricative phoneme However a new d appeared as an allophone of 8 in medial positions by assimilation of the voicing of the surrounding vowels 8 remained in initial and presumably in final positions though later terminal devoicing would in any case have eliminated the evidence of final d This West Germanic phoneme complete with its distribution of allophones survived into Old English In German and Dutch it shifted to a d the allophonic distinction simply being lost In German West Germanic d shifted to t in what may be thought of as a chain shift but in Dutch th đ and d merged into a single d The whole complex of Germanic dentals and the place of the fricatives within it can be summed up in this table PIE Proto Germanic West Germanic Old English German Dutch Notes t th th 8 d d Original t in initial position or in final position after a stressed vowel đ d Original t in medial position after a stressed vowel đ d d t Original t after an unstressed vowel dʰ Original dʰ in all positions d t t t s or ts t Original d in all positionsNote that this table shows only the basic rules The actual developments in all of the mentioned languages are more complicated due to dialectal variation peculiar developments in consonant clusters etc For more on these phonemes from a comparative perspective see Grammatischer Wechsel For the developments in German and Dutch see High German consonant shift Old English edit Thus English inherited a phoneme 8 in positions where other West Germanic languages have d and most other Indo European languages have t English three German drei Latin tres In Old English the phoneme 8 like all fricative phonemes in the language had two allophones one voiced and one voiceless which were distributed regularly according to phonetic environment d like v and z was used between two voiced sounds either vowels or voiced consonants 8 like f and s was spoken in initial and final position and also medially if adjacent to another unvoiced consonant Although Old English had two graphemes to represent these sounds th thorn and d eth it used them interchangeably unlike Old Icelandic which used th for 8 and d for d Development up to Modern English edit The most important development on the way to modern English was the investing of the existing distinction between d and 8 with phonemic value Minimal pairs and hence the phonological independence of the two phones developed as a result of three main processes In early Middle English times a group of very common function words beginning with 8 the they there etc came to be pronounced with d instead of 8 Possibly this was a sandhi development as these words are frequently found in unstressed positions they can sometimes appear to run on from the preceding word which may have resulted in the dental fricative being treated as though it were word internal This allowed a word initial minimal pair like thigh thy English has borrowed many words from Greek including a vast number of scientific terms Where the original Greek had the letter 8 theta English usually retained the Late Greek pronunciation regardless of phonetic environment resulting in the presence of 8 in medial position anthem methyl etc This allowed a medial minimal pair like ether either English has lost its original verb inflections When the stem of a verb ends with a dental fricative this was usually followed by a vowel in Old English and was therefore voiced It is still voiced in modern English even though the verb inflection has disappeared leaving the d at the end of the word Examples are to bathe to mouth to breathe Sometimes a remnant of the original vowel remained in the spelling see Silent e but this was inconsistent This allowed a minimal pair in final position like loath loathe Other changes that affected these phonemes included a shift d d when followed by unstressed suffix er Thus Old English faeder became modern English father likewise mother gather hither together weather from mōdor gaderian hider tōgaedere weder In a reverse process Old English byrthen and morthor or mythra become burden and murder compare the obsolete variants burthen and murther Dialectally the alternation between d and d sometimes extends to other words as bladder ladder solder with d possibly being restricted elsewhere by the former two clashing with blather and lather On the other hand some dialects retain original d and extend it to other words as brother further rather The Welsh name Llewelyn appears in older English texts as Thlewelyn Rolls of Parliament Rotuli parliamentorum I 463 1 King Edward I or II and Fluellen Shakespeare Henry V Th also occurs dialectally for wh as in thirl thortleberry thorl for whirl whortleberry whorl Conversely Scots has whaing whang white whittle for thwaing thwang thwite thwittle The old verb inflection eth Old English eth was replaced by s he singeth he sings not a sound shift but a completely new inflection the origin of which is still being debated Possibilities include alveolarization since s is easier to pronounce there than th or displacement by a nonstandard English dialect Dialectal realizations editIn some dialects the th sound phonemes 8 and d are pronounced differently from the dental fricatives 8 and d Most common are substitution with labiodental fricatives f and v fronting substitution with alveolar stops t and d stopping and substitution with alveolar fricatives s and z alveolarization Fronting and stopping are more common among speakers of English dialects whereas alveolarization is more common among language learners whose first languages are French German or Mandarin To speakers of varieties in which 8 and d are pronounced 8 and d fronting and stopping are generally considered to have less of a marked contrast with the standard pronunciation than alveolarization which is often more stigmatized A fourth less common substitution is h for 8 word initially or intervocalically This is called debuccalization and somewhat prevalent in Scottish English th fronting edit Main article th fronting In some areas such as London and certain dialects including African American Vernacular English and less commonly New Zealand many people realize the phonemes 8 and d as f and v respectively Although traditionally stigmatized as typical of a Cockney accent this pronunciation is fairly widespread especially when immediately surrounded by other fricatives for ease of pronunciation and has in the early 20th century become an increasingly noticeable feature of the Estuary English accent of South East England It has in at least one case been transferred into standard English as a neologism a bovver boy is a thug a boy who likes bother fights Joe Brown and his Bruvvers was a Pop group of the 1960s The song Fings ain t wot they used t be was the title song of a 1959 Cockney comedy Similarly a New Zealander from the northernmost parts of the country might state that he or she is from Norfland Note that at least in Cockney a word beginning with d as opposed to its voiceless counterpart 8 can never be labiodental Instead it is realized as any of d d d l ʔ or is dropped altogether 3 4 th stopping edit Main article th stopping Many speakers of African American Vernacular English Caribbean English Liberian English Nigerian English Philadelphia English and Philippine English along with other Asian English varieties pronounce the fricatives 8 d as alveolar stops t d Similarly but still distinctly many speakers of New York City English Chicago English Boston English Indian English Newfoundland English and Hiberno English use the dental stops t d typically distinct from alveolar t d instead of or in free variation with 8 d In Cockney the th stopping may occur when a word begins with d but not its voiceless counterpart 8 3 4 This is also associated with the accent of the English city of Sheffield such as the nickname dee dahs for residents but such pronunciations are now confined to the very oldest residents of Sheffield 5 th alveolarization edit Th alveolarization is a process that occurs in some African varieties of English where the dental fricatives 8 d merge with the alveolar fricatives s and z It is an example of assibilation In rarer or older varieties of African American Vernacular English 8 may be pronounced s after a vowel and before another consonant as in bathroom ˈbaesɹum 6 Th alveolarization is often parodied as typical of French and German speaking learners of English but it is widespread among many other foreign learners because the dental fricative th sounds are not very common among the world s languages Due to the said ridicule learners who are unable to realize these sounds sometimes opt for the less marked th fronting or th stopping instead of alveolarization citation needed Homophonous pairs s z 8 d IPA Notesace eighth ˈeɪs eighth more often merges with eights see below bass bath ˈbaes bass the fish but distinct in dialects with broad ABess Beth ˈbɛsbreeze breathe ˈbɹiːzclose clothe ˈkloʊzclose clothes ˈkloʊzeights eighth ˈeɪtsErse earth ˈɜː r sface faith ˈfeɪsforce forth ˈfoe r sforce fourth ˈfoe r sfrost frothed ˈfrɒst ˈfrɔːstgross growth ˈɡroʊskiss kith ˈkɪslays lathe ˈleɪzlaze lathe ˈleɪzlies lithe ˈlaɪzlouse Louth ˈlaʊslyse lithe ˈlaɪzmass math ˈmaesmess meth ˈmɛsmiss myth ˈmɪsmonths month ˈmʌnsmoss moth ˈmɒs ˈmɔːsmouse mouth ˈmaʊspass path ˈpaes ˈpɑːspiss pith ˈpɪspurse Perth ˈpɜː r srace wraith ˈreɪsrise writhe ˈraɪzRoss Roth ˈrɒs ˈrɔːsryes writhe ˈraɪzsai thigh ˈsaɪsane thane ˈseɪnsane thegn ˈseɪnsank thank ˈsaeŋksaw thaw ˈsɔːsaw Thor ˈsɔː In most Non rhotic accents specifically those without the Cot caught merger seam theme ˈsiːmseas seethe ˈsiːzseem theme ˈsiːmsees seethe ˈsiːzseize seethe ˈsiːzsick thick ˈsɪksigh thigh ˈsaɪsin thin ˈsɪnsing thing ˈsɪŋsink think ˈsɪŋksix sixth ˈsɪkssize scythe ˈsaɪzsoar thaw ˈsɔː Non rhotic acents with horse hoarse merger soar Thor ˈsɔː r With horse hoarse merger soared thawed ˈsɔːd Non rhotic accents with horse hoarse merger some thumb ˈsʌmsong thong ˈsɒŋ ˈsɔːŋsore thaw ˈsɔː Non rhotic accents with horse hoarse merger sore Thor ˈsɔː r With horse hoarse merger sored thawed ˈsɔːd Non rhotic accents with horse hoarse merger sort thought ˈsɔːt Non rhotic accents sought thought ˈsɔːtsuds thuds ˈsʌdzsum thumb ˈsʌmsump thump ˈsʌmpsunder thunder ˈsʌnde r sunk thunk ˈsʌŋkswart thwart ˈswɔː r tsword thawed ˈsɔːd Non rhotic accents with horse hoarse merger tense tenth ˈtɛnstents tenth ˈtɛn t struce truth ˈtruːsuse n youth ˈjuːswhiz with ˈwɪz With wine whine merger wizard withered ˈwɪze r dworse worth ˈwe r swrasse wrath ˈraeswreath Reece ˈriːswreath Rhys ˈriːsZ zee the ˈziː The before vowels and silent H but distinct in dialects where Z is zɛd Z zee thee ˈziː but distinct in dialects where Z is zɛd Zs zees these ˈziːzzen then ˈzɛnth debuccalization edit In many varieties of Scottish English 8 becomes h word initially and intervocalically 7 Th debuccalization occurs mainly in Glasgow and across the Central Belt A common example is hɪŋk for think This feature is becoming more common in these places over time but is still variable citation needed In word final position 8 is used as in standard English The existence of local h for 8 in Glasgow complicates the process of th fronting there a process which gives f for historical 8 Unlike in the other dialects with th fronting where f solely varies with 8 in Glasgow the introduction of th fronting there creates a three way variant system of h f and 8 Use of 8 marks the local educated norms the regional standard while use of h and f instead mark the local non standard norms h is well known in Glasgow as a vernacular variant of 8 when it occurs at the start of a word and intervocalically while f has only recently risen above the level of social consciousness Given that th fronting is a relatively recent innovation in Glasgow it was expected that linguists might find evidence for lexical diffusion for f and the results found from Glaswegian speakers confirm this citation needed The existing and particular lexical distribution of th debuccalization imposes special constraints on the progress of th fronting in Glasgow In accents with th debuccalization the cluster 8r becomes hr citation needed giving these dialects a consonant cluster that does not occur in other dialects The replacement of 8r with hr leads to pronunciations like three hri throw hro through threw hrʉ thrash hraʃ thresh hrɛʃ thrown throne hron thread hrɛd threat hrɛt Assimilation editAs with many English consonants a process of assimilation can result in the substitution of other speech sounds in certain phonetic environments Native speakers do this subconsciously At word boundaries alveolar stops next to dental fricatives assimilate very regularly especially in rapid colloquial speech involving both the place of articulation and the manner of articulation the alveolar stops become dental while the dental fricatives become stops 8 9 10 11 The resulting consonant is usually long geminated which may be the only audible cue for the speaker to distinguish particular words for example the definite and indefinite articles compare run the mile ˈɹʌn n e ˈmaɪl and run a mile ˈɹʌn e ˈmaɪl 11 in the ɪn de ɪn n e join the army ˈdʒɔɪn di ˈɑːmi ˈdʒɔɪn n i ˈɑːmi read these riːd diːz ɹiːd d iːz right there raɪt ˈdɛe ɹaɪt ˈt ɛe more commonly ɹaɪʔ ˈdɛe with a glottal stop fail the test ˈfeɪl de ˈtɛst ˈfeɪl l e ˈtɛst The alveolar fricatives may become dental as well 11 this thing dɪs 8ɪŋ dɪs 8ɪŋ or dɪs s ɪŋ takes them teɪks dem teɪks dm or teɪks s m was this wɒz dɪs wɒz dɪs or wɒz z ɪs 8 and d can also be lost through elision 12 13 months mʌns clothes kloʊz In rapid speech sixth s may be pronounced like six 14 Them may be contracted to em and in this case the contraction is often indicated in writing Some linguists see em as originally a separate word a remnant of Old English hem but as the apostrophe shows it is perceived in modern English as a contraction of them 15 Acquisition problems editChildren generally learn the less marked phonemes of the language before the more marked ones In the case of English speaking children 8 and d are often among the last phonemes to be learnt frequently not being mastered before the age of five Prior to this age many children substitute the sounds f and v respectively For small children fought and thought are therefore homophones As British and American children begin school at age four and five respectively this means that many are learning to read and write before they have sorted out these sounds and the infantile pronunciation is frequently reflected in their spelling errors ve fing for the thing Children with a lisp however have trouble distinguishing 8 and d from s and z respectively in speech using a single 8 or d pronunciation for both and may never master the correct sounds without speech therapy The lisp is a common speech impediment in English Foreign learners may have parallel problems Learners from very many cultural backgrounds have difficulties with English dental fricatives usually caused by interference with either sibilants or stops Words with a dental fricative adjacent to an alveolar fricative such as clothes kloʊdz or kloʊz truths tɹu8s fifths fɪf8s or fɪ8s sixths sɪks8s anesthetic ˌaenesˈ8ɛtɪk etc are commonly very difficult for foreign learners to pronounce Some of these words containing consonant clusters can also be difficult for native speakers including those using the standard 8 and d pronunciations generally allowing such accepted informal pronunciations of clothes as kloʊz a homophone of the verb close and fifth s as fɪ8 s History of the digraph editSee also Th digraph th for 8 and d edit Though English speakers take it for granted the digraph th is in fact not an obvious combination for a dental fricative The origins of this have to do with developments in Greek Proto Indo European had an aspirated dʱ that came into Greek as tʰ spelled with the letter theta In the Greek of Homer and Plato this was still pronounced tʰ and therefore when Greek words were borrowed into Latin theta was transcribed with th Since tʰ sounds like t with a following puff of air th was the logical spelling in the Latin alphabet By the time of New Testament Greek koine however the aspirated stop had shifted to a fricative tʰ 8 Thus theta came to have the sound that it still has in Modern Greek and which it represents in the IPA From a Latin perspective the established digraph th now represented the voiceless fricative 8 and was used thus for English by French speaking scribes after the Norman Conquest since they were unfamiliar with the Germanic graphemes d eth and th thorn Likewise the spelling th was used for 8 in Old High German prior to the completion of the High German consonant shift again by analogy with the way Latin represented the Greek sound It also appeared in early modern Swedish before a final shift to d The history of the digraphs ph for f and ch for Scots Welsh or German x is parallel th for t edit Since neither tʰ nor 8 was a native sound in Latin the tendency emerged at the latest in medieval Latin to substitute t Thus in many modern languages including French and German the th digraph is used in Greek loan words to represent an original 8 but is now pronounced t examples are French theatre German Theater In some cases this etymological th which has no remaining significance for pronunciation has been transferred to words in which there is no etymological justification for it For example German Tal valley cognate with English dale appears in many place names with an archaic spelling Thal contrast Neandertal and Neanderthal The German spelling reform of 1901 largely reversed these but they remain in some proper nouns The name Rothschild is an example of this being a compound of rot h red and Schild shield Examples of this are also to be found in English perhaps influenced immediately by French In some Middle English manuscripts th appears for t or d tho to or do thyll till whythe white thede deed In Modern English we see it in Esther Thomas Thames thyme Witham the town in Essex not the river in Lincolnshire which is pronounced with d and the old spelling of Satan as Sathan More recently the name of the capital of Nepal was often written Katmandu down to the late 20th century but is now usually spelt Kathmandu In a small number of cases this spelling later influenced the pronunciation amaranth amianthus and author have spelling pronunciations with 8 and some English speakers use 8 in Neanderthal th for th edit A few English compound words such as lightheaded or hothouse have the letter combination th split between the parts though this is not a digraph Here the t and h are pronounced separately light headed as a cluster of two consonants Other examples are anthill goatherd lighthouse outhouse pothead also in words formed with the suffix hood knighthood and the similarly formed Afrikaans loanword apartheid In a few place names ending in t ham the t h boundary has been lost and become a spelling pronunciation for example Grantham See also editPronunciation English pronunciation Received Pronunciation Spelling pronunciation Non native pronunciations of English English orthography Thorn EthReferences editCitations edit The American Heritage Dictionary 1969 Kenyon John S Knott Thomas A 1953 1944 A Pronouncing Dictionary of American English Springfield Mass Merriam Webster p 87 ISBN 0 87779 047 7 a b Wright 1981 137 a b Wells 1982 329 Stoddart Upton and Widdowson in Urban Voices Arnold London 1999 p 79 Phonological Features of African American Vernacular English Weber Tobias February 2014 Principles in the Emergence and Evolution of Linguistic Features in World Englishes ISBN 9783954891917 Roach Peter 2009 English Phonetics and Phonology Cambridge University Press p 112 ISBN 978 0 521 71740 3 Gramley Stephan Patzold Michael 2004 A Survey of Modern English Routledge p 76 ISBN 978 1 134 42046 9 Collins Beverley Mees Inger M 2013 Practical Phonetics and Phonology A Resource Book for Students Routledge p 122 ISBN 978 0 415 50649 6 a b c Shockey Linda 2003 2 5 1 d reduction Sound Patterns of Spoken English pp 43 44 ISBN 9780470758243 Bauer Laurie Lieber Rochelle Plag Ingo 2015 The Oxford Reference Guide to English Morphology Oxford University Press p 131 ISBN 978 0 19 874706 2 Collins Beverley Mees Inger M 2013 Practical Phonetics and Phonology A Resource Book for Students Routledge p 127 ISBN 978 0 415 50649 6 Jones Daniel 2006 Roach Peter Hartman James Setter Jane eds Introduction Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary 17th ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 68086 7 Online Etymology Dictionary em Retrieved 18 September 2006 Sources edit Collins Beverley Mees Inger M 2013 First published 2003 Practical Phonetics and Phonology A Resource Book for Students 3rd ed Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 50650 2 Shitara Yuko 1993 A survey of American pronunciation preferences Speech Hearing and Language 7 201 32 Wells John C 1982 Accents of English 2 The British Isles Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 24224 X Wright Peter 1981 Cockney Dialect and Slang London England B T Batsford Ltd Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pronunciation of English th amp oldid 1193175318, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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