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What is the correct Grammar
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.However, �an hotel', specifically, is regarded as old-fashioned though not quite extinct. The other words above are still commonly preceded by 'an'.
The Americans have an example which we do not, in that they pronounce �herb' as if there were no �h' present. Thus, they refer to �an (h)erb' just as we say: �an (h)our'.
I'm sure we all recall the judicial voice-over to the opening credits of Ronnie Barker's �Porridge'..."Norman Stanley Fletcher....you are an habitual criminal who accepts arrest as an occupational hazard and presumably accepts imprisonment in the same casual manner...."
There is no word 'otel' in standard English.
there are a few words that definitely have a silent H: hour, honour and related words. Most Hs are sounded. But there are a few, as Quizmonster says, that some people pronounce with a sounded H and some don't. Some of them baffle me a bit - people who say istoric or orrific never say istory or orror; so I find it a bit illogical to drop the Hs there. Anyway, hotel is one of these; I think otel is a minority pronunciation, and in decline, but many people do still say it that way.
The other odd word is H itself... many people these days seem to say haitch; I never have, and have no idea where it came from (cockney?). I think this is also a minority pronunciation - but it may be gaining.
�Haitch' is clearly much more recent, generally believed to come from Ireland. In addition, since so many of the teachers in early-days Australia were Irish Christian Brothers - it is probably more prevalent there than here, though that is possibly our source.
When this topic comes up, I invariably recall the story of the ill-educated army NCO telling recruits: "Rifle butts are made from hoak, hash and �ickory!"