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Pronunciation: ah, oh, etc

English Language & Usage Asked on May 25, 2021

English vowels have several pronunciations so when people try to explain how to pronounce foreign words (without IPA, which is what they should be using ;-)) they add lots of silent Hs and hyphens, e.g. KAH-zah.

Problem is, as a non-native speaker this only adds to the confusion. What’s the meaning of those Hs at the end of syllables? Do they make the vowels short or long? In "uh-oh", they seem to do both (it sounds as /oʔoʊ/ to me).

Could someone use IPA to explain how "ah, eh, ih, oh, uh" sound and tell me how they differ from "a, e, i, o, u" that make people feel the need to add an H?

One Answer

English does not have a phonemic orthography, so there are numerous pronunciation respelling systems to express what words sound like. Wikipedia lists a lot of them. Of those listed, only one (World Book Online) uses these five (IPA equivalent(s) in parenthesis):

  • ah (ɑː)
  • eh (ɛ)
  • ih (ɪ)
  • oh (oʊ)
  • uh (ʌ, ə, ɨ)

Also, hyphens are used to separate syllables and CAPS represent stressed syllables.


It's worth noting that I was not taught to use any one of these systems in school (US). For this reason, it seems likely a lot of people aren't going to be using a standard system, especially if they're random people on the internet. IPA in particular is impossible to use without learning first, and can't be typed on any standard keyboard.

Correct answer by Laurel on May 25, 2021

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