Why do the English have difficulty with the letter 'H' ? eg Wales is pronounced the same as whales, when is wen and what is wot. The word 'because' is pronounced 'bekizz' by tv people - are youse aw right doon there ?
maybe he's just been watching Lock, Stock & 2 Smoking Barrels with 'Atchet 'Arry.
To be fair, broad scousers really annoy me when they say "A 'otel" with a really forced glottal stop. It sounds horrible.
In Old English 'wh' was written 'hw' and the aspirated sound continued to be spoken for centuries after the written letters were switched ...
hwen
hwy
hwich
etc.
In many dialects of English the pronunciation of 'wh' has merged with 'w', a process known as the "wine-whine merger".
I'm getting a bit confused here, do you mean Welsh Wales or Somerset Wells? How can you tell which is which when you pronounce these? Or should that have been hwich is hwich hwen. O b..... I've got that wrong for a start. As hotel is a French word should it be Anglicised or pronounced 'otel?
wales/whales is something found in the ocean, big, and can have people in... yea,how r we meant to no the difference? im with u harry-wragg, though i am english xD
I'm with mamyalynne here, on 'parliament' and 'government'. Also, 'GuilDford', not 'Gilford' (the place name).
There was an English Civil War drama series some years ago, throughout which 'parliament' was pronounced 'parleyment'. Someone told me that was authentic for C17th, but I wasn't so sure.