Ghoti
Encyclopedia : G : GH : GHO : Ghoti
Ghoti is an imaginary word used to illustrate irregularities in English spelling. It is pronounced fish:
- "gh", /f/ as in laugh, /læːf, laːf/;
- "o", /ɪ/ as in women, /ˈwɪmɪn, ˈwɪmən/; and
- "ti", /ʃ/ as in nation, /ˈneɪʃən/.
Others argue that this ignores etymology and the normal rules of English spelling. The grapheme "gh" never represents the phoneme /f/ at the beginning of a word and "ti" never represents /ʃ/ at the end of a word. The pronunciation of the word women is the only word in English where "o" represents the sound /ɪ/ and this is partly due to the Great Vowel Shift.
Another interpretation of the pronunciation of ghoti which has been put forward is "..." (that is, no sound; silence): "gh" as in night; "o" as in people; "t" as in ballet; "i" as in business. For similar interpretations, see the [alphabet] of American linguist John Higgins.
It is possible to contrive other similarly amusing examples. Another one, origin uncertain, is:
- If gh is pronounced P in Hiccough...
- If ough is pronounced O in Dough...
- If phth is pronounced T in Phthisis...
- If eigh is pronounced A in Neighbour...
- If tte is pronounced T in Gazette...
- If eau is pronounced O in Plateau...
- :...then it should be possible to spell potato as ghoughphtheightteeau.
Another one, origin uncertain, is:
- If ti is pronounced SH in Nation...
- If o is pronounced I in Women...
- If gh is pronounced P in Hiccough...
- :...then it should be possible to spell ship as tiogh.
It has also been noted[[Citing sources citation needed]] that many of the irregularities that do exist in English spelling serve to preserve the word's history and etymology. For example, the word "electrician", in which the ci is pronounced sh due to palatalization, retains a linkage to its root "electricity" which would be lost if the different forms of the word were spelled "electrishun," "electrisity," and "electrik".
The sh sound itself is a good example of spelling irregularity. In Imagery and text: A dual coding theory of reading and writing (Lawrence Erlbaum, 2001), Mark Sadoski lists eleven ways of spelling /sh/: shirt, sugar, chute, action, issue, ocean, conscious, mansion, schwa, anxious, and special.
See also
References
- Holroyd, Michael, ''Bernard Shaw: Volume III: 1918-1950: The Lure
External links
- [How to pronounce "ghoti"]
- [Hau tu pranownse Inglish], an essay on spelling-to-sound rules that discusses "ghoti"
- ["What is ghoti?" by Jim Scobbie]
- [Information on the phonetic Shaw Alphabet]
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