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  • What do we call the “rd” in “3ʳᵈ” and the “th” in “9ᵗʰ”?
    The addition of -th -eth relates to numbers 4 to 20 (and similarly,) and is a suffix to the cardinal number However, as in the second and third examples, the rd st simply come from the right-end of the word for the ordinal number: 3 rd: thi rd 301 st: (three-hundred-) fir st (shouldn't that be 301 th?, I'm not going there)
  • “20th century” vs. “20ᵗʰ century” - English Language Usage . . .
    There they have idiosyncratically used 20 th rather than 20 th, but the point is that the letters and numbers — more properly, the figures — look different Figures can be proportionally spaced like letters, and so a digit 1 would take up less room than a digit 4 Or they can be all of the same width, as used in tables
  • Is there a rule for pronouncing “th” at the beginning of a word?
    The awareness that some Latin words in t- were from Greek th- encouraged over-correction in English and created unetymological forms such as Thames and author, while some words borrowed from Romanic languages preserve, on the Roman model, the Greek -th- spelling but the simple Latin "t" pronunciation (as in Thomas and thyme) (Etymonline)
  • Why was the th combination chosen for the th sound?
    The 'th' digraph can be found, for example, in the writing of Lucius Livius Andronicus (c 280 260 BC – c 200 BC) According to the OED: The Greek letter, which corresponds etymologically to Sanskrit ध dh (and so, by Grimm's Law, to Teutonic and English D), was in early inscriptions represented by TH, and was a true aspirate;
  • Is there any word in English where th sounds like t+h?
    Instead, "th" is almost universally (in English, that is) used as a digraph (which means that both the 't' and the 'h' combine to form a single sound; in other words, you could replace the "th" with some symbol without losing meaning) Basically, if you wanted to, you could consider "th" its own letter The primary ways "th" is used in English are:
  • Is there any rule for differentiating between the endings th and ht?
    The secondary issue is that of spelling, as you find th and ht confusing This is a matter of mis-parsing some common English digraphs This is a matter of mis-parsing some common English digraphs When attempting to read those words, you shouldn't take h and t together, but rather g and h together, as the digraph gh is pretty common in English, and is usually silent when it's not at the
  • How do you handle that that? The double that problem
    There are three very different uses of that: Subordinating that: “I know that this is the answer ”
  • Distinguishing f–t–θ in th-fronting and th-stopping dialects
    Several dialects feature th-fronting, where th becomes a labiodental fricative [f, v]; others feature th-stopping, where th becomes a dental stop [t̪, d̪] For example, three sounds like free with th-fronting, tree with th-stopping How well can English speakers distinguish word pairs in these dialects? Specifically:
  • Style clarification for date superscripts, th, st and nd
    I note that user @TrevorD wrote in a comment that it is conventional in Britain to use superscript, and as a fellow Briton, I agree that I prefer to use an an explicit superscript, and I'm under the impression that this is what I was taught at school (at a Southern English state school - i e non-fee-paying), which is strange because I can't find any style guides that recommend this style
  • Pronouncing the th sound in American accent
    However, I can say I have no problem pronouncing the voiceless "th" ( θ ) as taught by many sources including my lecturers by placing the tip of your tongue between your teeth but just blow air through your mouth without vibrating your vocal cords My pronunciation of, say "think", always sounds like a little bit of air at the beginning (when I place my finger in front of my mouth, I can feel





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