In modern English, and are distinct
phonemes, not merely
allophones, as demonstrated by
minimal pairs such as
thigh:thy, ether:either, teeth:teethe. They are distinguished from the neighbouring labiodental fricatives, sibilants and alveolar stops by such minimal pairs as
thought:fought/sought/taught and
then:Venn/Zen/den. The vast majority of words in English spelled with have , and almost all newly created words do. However, the high frequency of the function words, particularly
the, means that is more frequent in
actual use. As a general rule, in initial position, is used except in certain function words; in medial position, is used except for certain foreign loan words; and in final position, is used except in certain verbs. A more detailed explanation follows.
Initial position • Almost all words beginning with a dental fricative have . • A small number of common
function words (the
Middle English anomalies mentioned below) begin with . The words in this group are: • 1 definite article:
the • 4 demonstratives:
this, that, these, those • 2 personal pronouns each with multiple forms:
thou, thee, thy, thine, thyself; they, them, their, theirs, themselves, themself • 7 adverbs and conjunctions:
there, then, than, thus, though, thence, thither (though in the United States
thence and
thither may be pronounced with initial ) • Various compound adverbs based on the above words:
therefore, thereupon, thereby, thereafter, thenceforth, etc. • A few words use an initial for (e.g.
Thomas): see below.
Medial position • Most native words with a medial have . • Between vowels (including
r-colored vowels), followed by a weak vowel:
heathen, farthing, fathom, Worthington; and the frequent combination -ther-:
bother, brother, dither, either, farther, father, further, heather, lather, mother, northern, other, rather, smithereens, slither, southern, together, weather, whether, wither;
Caruthers, Netherlands, Witherspoon. • Followed by :
brethren. • A few native words have a medial : • The suffixes
-y, -ly, -ing and
-ed normally leave terminal unchanged:
earthy, healthy, pithy, stealthy, wealthy, bothy (from
booth);
fourthly,
monthly;
earthing;
frothed; but
worthy and
swarthy have . • Some plurals have , as discussed in more detail below:
cloths, baths etc. • Compound words in which the first element ends or the second element begins with frequently have , as these elements would in isolation:
bathroom, Southampton; anything, everything, nothing, something. • The only other native words with medial would seem to be
brothel (usually) and
Ethel. • Most loan words with a medial have . • From Greek:
Agatha, anthem, atheist, Athens, athlete, cathedral, Catherine, Cathy, enthusiasm, ether, ethics, ethnic, lethal, lithium, mathematics, method, methyl, mythical, panther, pathetic, sympathy • From Latin:
author, authority (though in Latin these had ; see below). Also names borrowed from or via Latin:
Bertha, Gothic, Hathaway, Othello, Parthian • From Celtic languages:
Arthur (Welsh has medially: );
Abernathy, Abernethy, as an anglicization, though Gaelic has no . • From Hebrew:
Ethan,
Jonathan,
Bethlehem,
Bethany,
Leviathan,
Bethel • From German:
Luther, as an anglicized
spelling pronunciation (see below). • Loanwords with medial : • Greek words with the combination -thm-:
algorithm, logarithm, rhythm. Exception : arithmetic . The word
asthma may be pronounced or , though here the is usually silent. • A few words have a medial for or (e.g.
lighthouse): see below.
Final position • Nouns and adjectives • Nouns and adjectives ending in a dental fricative usually have :
bath, breath, cloth, froth, health, hearth, loath, mouth, sheath, sooth, tooth/teeth, width, wreath. • Exceptions are usually marked in the spelling with a
silent:
tithe, lathe, lithe with . •
blithe can have either or .
booth has in England but in America. • Verbs • Verbs ending in a dental fricative usually have , and are frequently spelled with a silent :
bathe, breathe, clothe, loathe, scathe, scythe, seethe, sheathe, soothe, teethe, tithe, wreathe, writhe. Spelled without :
mouth (verb) nevertheless has . •
froth has whether as a noun or as a verb. • The verb endings -s, -ing, -ed do not change the pronunciation of a in the final position in the stem:
bathe has , therefore so do
bathed, bathing, bathes;
frothing has . Likewise
clothing used as a noun,
scathing as an adjective etc. • The archaic verb inflection "-eth" has . • Others •
with has either or (see below), as do its compounds:
within,
without,
outwith,
withdraw,
withhold,
withstand,
wherewithal, etc.
Plurals • Plural after may be realized as either or : • Some plural nouns ending in , with a preceding vowel, have , although the singulars always have ; however, a variant in will be found for many of these:
baths, mouths, oaths, paths, sheaths, truths, wreaths, youths exist in both varieties;
clothes always has (if not pronounced ). • Others have only /θs/:
azimuths, breaths, cloths, deaths, faiths, Goths, growths, mammoths, moths, myths, smiths, sloths, zeniths, etc. This includes all words in 'th' preceded by a consonant (
earths,
hearths,
lengths,
months,
widths, etc.) and all numeric words, whether preceded by vowel or consonant (
fourths, fifths, sixths, sevenths, eighths ,
twelfths, fifteenths, twentieths, hundredths ,
thousandths). •
Booth has in the singular and hence in the plural for most speakers in England. In American English, it has in the singular and or in the plural. This pronunciation also prevails in Scotland.
Grammatical alternation In pairs of related words, an
alternation between and is possible, which may be thought of as a kind of
consonant mutation. Typically appears in the singular of a noun, in the plural and in the related verb:
cloth ,
clothes ,
to clothe . This is directly comparable to the or alternation in
house, houses or
wolf, wolves. It goes back to the allophonic variation in Old English (see below), where it was possible for to be in final position and thus voiceless in the basic form of a word, but in medial position and voiced in a related form. The loss of inflections then brought the voiced medial consonant to the end of the word. Often a remnant of the old inflection can be seen in the spelling in the form of a silent , which may be thought of synchronically as a marker of the voicing.
Regional differences in distribution The above discussion follows
Daniel Jones'
English Pronouncing Dictionary, an authority on standard
British English, and
Webster's New World College Dictionary, an authority on
American English. Usage appears much the same between the two. Regional variation within standard English includes the following: • The final consonant in
with is pronounced (its original pronunciation) in northern
Britain, but in the south, though some speakers of Southern British English use before a voiceless consonant and before a voiced one. A 1993 postal poll of
American English speakers showed that 84% use , while 16% have (Shitara 1993). (The variant with is presumably a
sandhi development.) • In
Scottish English, is found in many words which have further south. The phenomenon of nouns terminating in taking plurals in does not occur in the north. Thus the following have :
baths,
mouths (noun),
truths. Scottish English does have the termination in verb forms, however, such as
bathes,
mouths (verb),
loathes, and also in the noun
clothes, which can be realized without . Scottish English also has in
with, booth, thence etc., and the Scottish pronunciation of
thither, almost uniquely, has both and in the same word. Where there is an American-British difference, the North of Britain generally agrees with the United States on this phoneme pair. • Some dialects of American English use at the beginning of the word "thank". ==History of the English phonemes==