Ough (orthography)


Ough is a four-letter sequence, a tetragraph, used in English orthography and notorious for its unpredictable pronunciation. It has at least eight pronunciations in North American English and nine in British English, and no discernable patterns for choosing among them.

History

In Middle English, ough was regularly pronounced with a back rounded vowel and a velar fricative.

Most common pronunciations

"Slough" has three pronunciations depending on its meaning:
An example sentence using the nine pronunciations commonly found in modern usage is, "The wind was rough along the lough as the ploughman fought through the snow, and though he hiccoughed and coughed, his work was thorough."
Other pronunciations can be found in proper nouns, many of which are of Celtic origin rather than English. For example, ough can represent in the surname Coughlin, in Ayscough, and in the name Colcolough in Virginia.
The two occurrences of in the English place name Loughborough are pronounced differently, resulting in. Additionally, three parishes of Milton Keynes—Woughton, Loughton and Broughton —all have different pronunciations of the combination.
Tough, though, through and thorough are formed by adding another letter each time, yet none of them rhyme.
Some humorous verse has been written to illustrate this seeming incongruity:
Because of the unpredictability of the combination, many English spelling reformers have proposed replacing it with more phonetic combinations, some of which have caught on in varying degrees of formal and informal success. Generally, spelling reforms have been more widely accepted in the United States and less so in other English-speaking areas. One problem is that a pronunciation with the velar fricative is still found locally in parts of North-East Scotland, where, for example, trough is pronounced.
In April 1984, at its yearly meeting, the Simplified Spelling Society adopted the following reform as its house style:
In early colonial America, John Smith used the spelling raugroughcum for the animal we know today as the raccoon. This was a new animal to the explorers and, alongside the tribal name Quiyoughcohannock, shows that the ough combination was still being used to coin new words in early colonial America. Another placename is Youghiogheny, which begins with.

Already varyingly formal

In the UK, the word dough can also be pronounced, a pronunciation remembered in the spelling in the word duffpudding. Likewise, the word enough can be pronounced or and the spelling enow is an acceptable dialect or poetic spelling.
The following spellings are generally considered unacceptable in other areas, but are standard in the United States:
However, all of these are considered unacceptable in written British English and formal American English, with the exception of in the most casual and informal forms of textual conversation.

Rare informal

is orthographically rather similar to, but admits much less pronunciation variation:
The similar yields at least five standard pronunciations, although two are only found in words derived from proper names:
Dialectal forms also render pronunciations such as winder, yeller for window, yellow, and fella, tomorra for fellow, tomorrow.
A comparable group is, which differs however in that, unlike, it does not ever represent a single phoneme. can be pronounced in at least five ways:
When a syllable is added after the, the is often pronounced, resulting in a total of at least eight pronunciations of :
—but not, for example, in bomber, comber, entombing, etc.
The group also has a wide variety of pronunciations, in part because of the two phonemes represented in English. Here are seven different pronunciations:
The group has at least nine pronunciations, though unlike with or, context often suggests the correct pronunciation: