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How do you pronounce 'height'?
This might sound like a daft question, but it is something that I have noticed since moving to Georgia. The funny thing is, I notice it among folk from out of the area, so it isn't a local phenomena. I lived in California for five years before moving here, and I don't remember hearing it there, but that isn't to say it didn't happen.
The issue is with the word HEIGHT. I have always pronounced this with the phonetic spelling 'hahyt', like the ending of the word Fahrenheit, and rhyming with fight, might, light, tight, etc. However, a majority of the people I work with here pronounce the same word with the phonetic spelling 'hahytth' with a -th, like the ending of the word with, or smith. Why? HEIGHT doesn't end in -th, so why is it pronounced like it does? Why not just spell it 'heigth'? The only explanation I can think of is that it fits in with length, width, breath, depth - but then they don't pronounce weight with a -th. Nobody I ask seems to know why they say it, so can anyone here enlighten me? Is this how it is taught in school here or is there another explanation? Thanks. |
Re: How do you pronounce 'height'?
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As far as I know, height is correct. There is no -th sound on the end. Just MHO.
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I say high with a t at the end.
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Re: How do you pronounce 'height'?
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Being from the south myself (Alabama) this is one of those things I never even thought about. After reading your question, I too realized that we, at least most of the local 'natives', pronounce it with the 'th' sound. I also found almost a different dialect within Alabama from the northern part (where I grew up) to the more southern areas. We may not speak phonically / grammatically correct but we do the best that we can!
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Nothing like listening to a cultured Southern woman talk. I sit near one at my usual breakfast restaurant.
Jim |
Never thought about it before, but I guess I use both depending on what I am talking about.
eg: My daughter is afraid of "hites". What is the "hite-th of that overpass? |
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Have heard it many times too.....
I think it is just incorrect.
Also, my personal favourite, especially coming from the guy with the most weapons...... NUKE-YA-LER. If you own them, you should be able to pronounce the word.....Note that every single character in the Simpsons says nuke-ya-ler, EXCEPT Homer...lol. |
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English as changed much over the centuries. Many of the peoples of the south came from places in the British Isles where certain archaic forms were still spoken when they came over to America.
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In Tejas its is pronounced "bout-dis-ay"
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I'm an old fart and just realized I use both pronunciations. I agree with -th words that describe shape. So I've used both height and highth on occasion without realizing it.
I've only lived in Minnesota and California, so the southern take does not apply. |
Re: Have heard it many times too.....
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I'm going to start pronouncing the word, "unclear" as un-cu-lar and see who notices. |
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I, like the person who posed the question in the article, grew up in England and I had never heard it pronounced with a -th. The problem is that now I've noticed it I find it REALLY annoying! Just another irrational irk, I'm sure I'll get over it. |
Pronunciation: 'hIt, ÷'hItth
both ways, and I often spell it with a th on the end. |
Just the way it's speeeled ;)
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Until the end of the seventeenth century, highth or heighth were its standard spellings. They are now secondary spellings.
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