How is H pronounced in Ireland?

The oddly named letter H is usually pronounced 'aitch' /eɪtʃ/ in British English, but in Ireland we tend to aspirate it as 'haitch' /heɪtʃ/. This haitching is a distinctive feature of Hiberno-English
Hiberno-English
Hiberno-English (from Latin Hibernia: "Ireland") or Irish English, also formerly Anglo-Irish, is the set of English dialects native to the island of Ireland (including both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland).
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hiberno-English
, one that may have originated as an a hypercorrection but is now the norm in most Irish dialects.
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Is there a letter H in Irish language?

The Irish alphabet doesn't actually contain the letter H, even though it appears constantly in modern Irish spelling! The H is used to denote a special effect called lenition -- which is really a fancy way of talking about aspiration of consonants.
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Is H silent in Irish?

Gaelic has only eighteen letters in its alphabet, so no J, K, Q, V, W, X, Y or Z. A consonant + H denotes a completely different sound to the same consonant without an H following it. Gaelic has a system of broad vowels (A, O, U) and slender vowels (E, I).
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Is H pronounced Haitch or Aitch?

For most English speakers, the name for the letter is pronounced as /eɪtʃ/ and spelled "aitch" or occasionally "eitch". The pronunciation /heɪtʃ/ and the associated spelling "haitch" is often considered to be h-adding and is considered nonstandard in England.
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Is the H in hotel silent?

In the past, both “an hotel” and “a hotel” were commonly used because English words of French origin beginning with an “H” (such as “hotel”) used to be pronounced without it (so “hotel” would be pronounced just “otel”). Nonetheless, current usage inclines towards using “a”, not “an”, and always pronouncing the “H”.
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BBC How do you pronounce H



Why do some people say Haitch instead of H?

Given that Irish immigrants in Australia were predominantly working class, to say 'haitch' rather than 'aitch' (runs the folk etymology) marks you as some mixture of proletarian, Irish and Catholic-educated. This is to be avoided, lest you appear rude or—worse—poor.
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Is it correct to say Haitch?

Those who pronounce the word as haitch and spell it accordingly as haitch, are in a sense restoring its original purpose. Younger speakers are generally more inclined to say haitch, although there are still some people in the community who do not regard it as correct.
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Do the Irish roll their R's?

The Irish don't drop 'r'; think of the word 'Ireland' – the English pronunciation sounds like 'island', whereas the Irish enunciate the 'r', so it sounds more like 'oirrland'. And the Scots not only don't drop it, they trill it, so 'Fergus from Aberdeen' really sounds like 'Ferrgus from Aberrdeen.
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Is FH silent in Irish?

fh (broad) = silent.
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Why is Irish spelled weird?

The reason why Irish spelling looks weird at first is that it makes slender and broad consonants explicit. Instead of using a different character for broad and slender, Irish uses vowels (and sometimes extra consonants) to indicate if a consonant is slender or broad.
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How do you pronounce Caol in Irish?

Pronunciation
  1. (Munster) IPA: /keːl̪ˠ/, [këːə̯l̪ˠ]
  2. (Connacht) IPA: /kiːlˠ/
  3. (Ulster) IPA: /kiːlˠ/, (older) /kɯːlˠ/
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Is Irish same as Gaelic?

The word “Gaelic” in English derives from Gaeilge which is the word in Irish for the language itself. However, when English is being used, the Irish language is conventionally referred to as “Irish,” not “Gaelic.”
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Why do the British say Haitch?

The name of the letter H comes from the french name "hache" which was /atʃə/ in Old French, which middle english adapted as /aːtʃə/ and which became /eɪtʃ/ in modern english. The pronunciation "haitch" is just adding a [h] sound back to "aitch" because most letters start with their sound.
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Why do Americans say H differently?

Our American cousins seem sometimes to arbitrarily decide that they shall pronounce a word in the French style even if it has been an English word for nearly a thousand years. Thus they leave the "h" silent in herb, just as the French do.
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Is the h silent in thyme?

The correct pronunciation of thyme is exactly like the word "time". The "h" in thyme is silent and "i" is pronounced with a long "i", which means like the word "eye". The end result is that thyme is pronounced exactly how you would say the word "time".
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Why is the h in Thomas silent?

It's actually because of the modern Greek pronunciation that "th" is used to represent the sound it makes in English. Most words that English has borrowed from Greek via Latin that have a "th" use the modern Greek pronunciation of theta.
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Which letter is silent in ghost?

And the letter 'h' is silent in the word 'ghost'.
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Is the H silent in Vehicle?

The H in the word vehicle doesn't have a strong /h/ sound. Some people may use an /h/ sound, but you really don't need to. If you say ve➝hicle with a distinct /v/ sound and a long clear vowel in the first syllable, Americans will understand you when you say it! Dropping the /h/ sound is up to you.
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Is it zed or zee?

English speakers in other Commonwealth countries also prefer the pronunciation zed. As zed is the British pronunciation and zee is chiefly American, zed represents one of the rare occasions in which most Canadians prefer the British to the American pronunciation.
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How do you say MH in Irish?

Irish spelling often baffles the beginner. For instance: mh at the start of a word is pronounced as a w; e.g., mo mhála ("my bag") is pronounced 'mu wall-ah' (/mˠʊ ˈwaːl̪ˠə/). mh in the centre of a word is pronounced as a v sound; e.g., nimh ("poison") is pronounced 'niv' (/nʲɪvʲ/)
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