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Haitch?

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bainbrig | 13:43 Tue 13th Feb 2018 | Society & Culture
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Heard on BBC London TV this morning:

“W HAITCH Smith” (for W H Smith).

There is no such word as HAITCH,

Or have they changed the language?
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How do you soothe a language pedant?
There, their, they're
Jahulaye - but aitch doesn't and that's the correct spelling.
A phonetic language was tried about 60 years ago and was a failure. In the north we had grass and bath, in the south they had graass and baath, amongst other things. Regional accents completely screw up a phonetic system.
Whether / weather
Whales / Wales
Which / witch
On a similar theme, my son gets irritated by my saying "where's it to?" rather than "Where is it?" I know it's not standard English, and I'm not uneducated. It's a Somerset thing. I do it mostly to wind him up now.
Davegosling, with my Dundonian/Scottish accent, these words don't sound similar.
but its spelt "aitch"
Quite right, maggie!
Another one is 'eck cetera' for 'et cetera'. Susie Dent seems to say this a lot, which surprises me, but she'd know better than me so perhaps that is the correct way of saying it. Sounds wrong to me though.
no its not correct Cloverjo
Another one that puzzles me is when English announcers say "An 'otel"
I would say "A hotel" as we never drop the H up here in jock land.
as we never drop the H up here in jock land.

Well unlike us Black Country folk yo ay spakin proper English then, maggie ;-)
hotel was traditionally pronounced 'otel until a few years ago. It's started being aspirated like aitch.

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