A list of 28 words by pterodactyl.
- tophatwas added by WDitot and appears on 8 lists
- hogsheadwas added by qroqqa and appears on 30 lists
- blowholewas added by rolig and appears on 10 lists
- towheewas added by rolig and appears on 7 lists
- towheadwas added by rolig and appears on 10 lists
- blowhardwas added by rolig and appears on 35 lists
- arrowheadwas added by rolig and appears on 13 lists
- cooperatewas added by rolig and appears on 16 lists
- aloysiuswas added by rolig and appears on 4 lists
- reinforcewas added by rolig and appears on 30 lists
- uphillwas added by rolig and appears on 6 lists
- engravewas added by qroqqa and appears on 32 lists
- ongoingwas added by qroqqa and appears on 20 lists
- packhorsewas added by pterodactyl and appears on 6 lists
- lunkheadwas added by pterodactyl and appears on 22 lists
- goshawkwas added by pterodactyl and appears on 13 lists
- upheavalwas added by pterodactyl and appears on 41 lists
- hotheadwas added by pterodactyl and appears on 17 lists
- upholsterywas added by pterodactyl and appears on 25 lists
- haphazardwas added by pterodactyl and appears on 87 lists
- potholewas added by pterodactyl and appears on 12 lists
- anthillwas added by pterodactyl and appears on 9 lists
- ungainlywas added by pterodactyl and appears on 90 lists
- chophousewas added by pterodactyl and appears on 12 lists
- courthousewas added by pterodactyl and appears on 12 lists
- boathousewas added by pterodactyl and appears on 8 lists
- mishearwas added by pterodactyl and appears on 4 lists
- mishapwas added by pterodactyl and appears on 31 lists
pterodactyl commented on the list looks-like-a-digraph-but-isn-t
Digraphs are one of the many exceptions to phonetic spelling. I guess that makes these words exceptions to the exceptions?
October 18, 2008
rolig commented on the list looks-like-a-digraph-but-isn-t
Fun list! I would question, however, the inclusion of Thomas, where "Th" is still a digraph (two letters representing one phoneme), just as "ch" is still a digraph in "character". An interesting case is threshold, where "sh" represents "sh + h".
October 20, 2009
pterodactyl commented on the list looks-like-a-digraph-but-isn-t
Huh, good point. I always interpreted the "h" in "Thomas" as a silent letter, which doesn't represent any phoneme in the word, but it could very well be part of a digraph representing /t/. I suppose that, to resolve this question, we'd have to go into the name's etymology.
October 20, 2009
rolig commented on the list looks-like-a-digraph-but-isn-t
My guess would be that it came into English via Latin, which took it from Greek (Θωμᾶς), though orginally it's an Aramaic name meaning "twin". In any case, that "h" was part of a digraph representing the Greek letter theta.
October 20, 2009
pterodactyl commented on the list looks-like-a-digraph-but-isn-t
Oh, now I understand! Theta doesn't represent /θ/, it represents an aspirated /t/... so the "Th" in "Thomas" also represents an aspirated /t/... but English doesn't distinguish between aspirated and non-aspirated consonants, so we pronounce it with a standard English /t/ (which probably gets aspirated anyway, because it's word-initial).
Fascinating. Thanks, rolig!
October 21, 2009
milosrdenstvi commented on the list looks-like-a-digraph-but-isn-t
hothead; lunkhead; upheaval, packhorse
October 21, 2009
pterodactyl commented on the list looks-like-a-digraph-but-isn-t
Milos, I'm with you on hothead and upheaval, but you've lost me with lunkhead and packhorse. Is kh a digraph?
October 21, 2009
bilby commented on the list looks-like-a-digraph-but-isn-t
Single character in Arabic.
October 21, 2009
rolig commented on the list looks-like-a-digraph-but-isn-t
In English, kh is a digraph in khan, Kharkov, and Khrushchev, where it conventionally represents the voiceless velar fricative /x/ in other languages, though in English it is usually pronounced as the voiceless velar plosive /k/.
October 21, 2009
pterodactyl commented on the list looks-like-a-digraph-but-isn-t
Oh, I see. Yeah, that makes sense.
I'm opening up the list to anyone. Dive right in!
October 21, 2009
madmouth commented on the list looks-like-a-digraph-but-isn-t
in Hindi the 'kh' also stands--ostensibly--for the aspirated k, though one does hear it realized as the velar fricative quite often.
October 21, 2009
rolig commented on the list looks-like-a-digraph-but-isn-t
Btw, I once had a brilliant professor who was Czech. He generally spoke excellent English, but in one lecture at least he kept referring th "haffazard" events (with the stress on the third syllable). I should perhaps have quietly informed him of the correct pronunciation after the lecture, but it was so cute I wanted to start saying it myself.
October 22, 2009