Th2
abbr.
- Bible. Thessalonians
- Thursday
Did you mean: th (abbreviation), Th (symbol – in chemistry), James Oglethorpe (English military leader, financier & explorer), .th (abbreviation) More...
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The noun has 2 meanings:
Meaning #1:
the fifth day of the week; the fourth working day
Synonym: Thursday
Meaning #2:
a soft silvery-white tetravalent radioactive metallic element; isotope 232 is used as a power source in nuclear reactors; occurs in thorite and in monazite sands
Synonyms: thorium, atomic number 90
Th is a digraph in the Roman alphabet.
The most obvious use of the letter combination <th> is to represent the juxtaposition of the phonemes /t/ and /h/, as in English hothouse. However, this is not strictly a digraph, as it is representing a consonant cluster rather than a single phoneme.
As a digraph in the strict sense, <th> was originally introduced in Latin, which had many
Still today, <th> is used in academic transcription systems to represent letters in oriental alphabets which have the
value /tʰ/. According to Royal Thai General System of Transcription, for example, <th>
represents a series of
A sound shift in Greek in the last two centuries BC resulted in the letter <θ> coming to denote the voiceless dental fricative (
This was then borrowed into the spelling system of some other languages which had the phoneme /θ/, including English. Initially, although Old English was written in the Latin
alphabet, it used
Other languages using <th> to represent /θ/ include
The use of the digraph <th> to represent a voiced sound is actually rather surprising, but in English it is used also
for the
Because neither /tʰ/ nor /θ/ were native sounds in Latin, an original <θ> in Greek loanwords soon came to be pronounced in Latin with
/t/. They continued to be spelled with <th> in deference to their
etymology. This practice was then borrowed into
In early modern times, French, German and English all expanded this by analogy to words in which there was no etymological reason for it, but for the most part the modern spelling systems have eliminated this. A rare example of unetymological <th> in English is the name of the River Thames.
In English, <th> for /t/ can also occur in loan-words from French or German, such as Neanderthal.
In Irish and
This use of digraphs with <h> to indicate lenition is an entirely separate system from the other uses, which all derive from Latin. While it is possible that the presence of digraphs with <h> in Latin may have inspired the Celtic usage, their allocation to phonemes is based entirely on the internal logic of the Celtic languages.
The Irish and Scottish Gaelic lenited /t/ is silent in medial and final positions. Gaelic sgith /ski:/ 'tired'. Exceptionally also in initial position (Gaelic thu /u:/ 'you').
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| Th 37pwd7uy | th 37px50u |
| Th 65phd7uy | th 42pd50u |
Did you mean: th (abbreviation), Th (symbol – in chemistry), James Oglethorpe (English military leader, financier & explorer), .th (abbreviation) More...
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Copyrights:
![]() | Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Th (digraph)". Read more |
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