Several English interjections contain sounds, or are sounds as opposed to words, that do not (or very rarely) exist in regular English
phonological inventory. For example: •
Ahem , ("Attention!") may contain a
glottal stop or a in any dialect of English; the glottal stop is common in
American English, some British dialects, and in other languages, such as
German. •
Gah , ("Gah, there's nothing to do!") ends with , which does not occur with regular English words. •
Psst ("Listen closely!") is an entirely consonantal syllable, and its consonant cluster does not occur initially in regular English words. •
Shh ("Quiet!") is another entirely consonantal syllable word. •
Tut-tut ("Shame on you"), also spelled
tsk-tsk, is made up entirely of
clicks, which are an active part of regular speech in several
African languages. This particular click is
dental. (This also has the spelling pronunciation .) •
Ugh ("Disgusting!") ends with a
velar fricative consonant, which is otherwise restricted to just a few regional dialects of English, though is common in languages like
Spanish,
German,
Gaelic, and
Russian. •
Whew or
phew , [] ("What a relief!"), also spelled
shew, may start with a
bilabial fricative, a sound pronounced with a strong puff of air through the
lips. This sound is a common phoneme in such languages as
Suki (a language of
New Guinea) and
Ewe and
Logba (both spoken in
Ghana and
Togo). •
Uh-oh ("Oh, no!") contains a glottal stop. •
Yeah ("Yes") ends with the vowel , or in some dialects the short vowel or tensed , none of which are found at the end of any regular English words. ==See also==