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		Message board > pronunciation of GH     
			
		 pronunciation of GH 
		
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 Mariethe House
 
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							| pronunciation of GH 
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							|  What is the rule for the different pronunciations of GH , like in  Plough, dough, thought .... Why is it "f" in some cases and mute or "g" ?     Thank you in advance my dear friends from all over the world!!EDIT   Thank you Alex! Actually, I was expecting an answer from you , the best linguist ever!! Thank you   |  3 Apr 2015      
					
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 jean-in-japan
 
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							| I don �t think there is a rule.  It �s just one of the (annoying) aspects of English spelling that comes from the fact that English vocabulary comes from so many other different languages.     Slightly off-topic, but I read once that the silent  �gh � was actually not silent hundreds of years ago.  Google could tell you more about this, but I think it was a soft aspirated   �ch � sound kind of like the Scottish  �ch � in Loch Ness.   After a while the sound disappeared but its trace still remains in the written language.   |  3 Apr 2015     
					
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 Mariethe House
 
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							|  Thank you very much Jean.   In fact, I did find something!  it isn � a rule but the link below explains the origin of 10 words using the "ough" suffix  with its different ways of pronouncing it! Quite interesting! |  3 Apr 2015     
					
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 almaz
 
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							| David Crystal devotes a whole chapter to the  �ough� set in his book Spell It Out. He points out that some of the  �ough� spellings are perfectly regular/systematic � it�s not the gh which causes the problems, but the vowels. |  4 Apr 2015     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							|  A rough rule is that gh at the beginning of a word is pronounced like g (ghost, ghoul), Inside a word it is silent, unless it is part of a compound word (thought) At the end, it is either silent (through) or pronounced like f (rough), and these just have to be memorized.   Bruce  |  4 Apr 2015     
					
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