The social status of /h/ in English

Authors

  • Ignacio Murillo López

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14198/raei.2007.20.08

Keywords:

Lenguaje oral, Variación lingüística, Variación fonética, Fonemas, Sociolingüística, Lengua inglesa

Abstract

Languages are used as a vehicle of communication in the societies where each of them is spoken. Within those societies there are normally different groups, and each of those groups usually has a particular, or particular ways of communicating and using the language shared by all of them. Differences like this may be of several types: regional uses, a specific lexis depending on each one’s occupation, formal or colloquial uses, social class variation, etc. In this article the issue of social class language variation is explored. Particularly, our focus here is that of the status of the /h/-phoneme in English. Its pronunciation as a voiceless glottal fricative consonant or its absence is a symbol of the social divide in some places where English is spoken. In those places, the absence of the /h/-phoneme is considered erroneous, and the speech of those who do not use it, is not considered correct or appropriate. Here we analyse the origin of that linguistic phenomenon, as well as the reasons for the establishment of the absence of the /h/-phoneme as a symbol of the social divide in some English-speaking territories.

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Published

15-11-2007

How to Cite

Murillo López, Ignacio. 2007. “The Social Status of /h/ In English”. Alicante Journal of English Studies / Revista Alicantina De Estudios Ingleses, no. 20 (November):157-66. https://doi.org/10.14198/raei.2007.20.08.

Issue

Section

Articles