- Rh (digraph)
Rh is a digraph found in some
language s. Most words in theEnglish language that begin with this digraph were originally from theGreek language as transliterated through theLatin language . Examples include "rhapsody", "rhetoric" and "rhythm". These were pronounced in Ancient Greek with an "h" sound coming just before the "r" sound (see "spiritus asper "), though in English this never applied. The word "rhyme", however, is an artefact; originally "rime", the respelling first appeared in the early seventeenth century. (Ancient Greek poetry, as well as that of Latin, did not rhyme; this word is of Old English in origin.) The digraph may also be found within words, but always at the start of a word component, e.g., "polyrhythmic".German, French, and the auxiliary language
Interlingua use "rh" in the same way.This digraph is also found in the
Welsh language where it represents avoiceless alveolar trill (IPA2|r̥), that is a voiceless "r" sound. It can be found anywhere; the most common occurrence in the English language from Welsh is in the slightly respelled given name "Rhonda".In
Wade-Giles transliteration, it is used for the syllable-final rhotic ofMandarin Chinese . In theGwoyeu Romatzyh romanization ofMandarin Chinese , initial "rh-" indicates an even tone on a syllable beginning in IPA|/ʐ/, which is otherwise spelled "r-."
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