The "H" in pH stands for hydrogen, which is the chemical element that plays a major role in determining acidity or alkalinity. The "H" is pronounced separately to emphasize its significance in the term.
The French word "dauphin" is pronounced as "doh-fanh." The "ph" is pronounced as an "f" sound.
The name "Pham" is pronounced as "fam", where the "ph" makes an "f" sound and the "a" is pronounced similar to the "a" in "cat".
It is pronounced Stephan in French.
I know only names: Joseph, Stephen. But there is 'ph' combination.Are such words really exist?
A tongue twister with "ph" and "gh" sounds and the letter "f" is: "Fred fed Phil’s phat pheasant in the phosphorescent light."
H/h is pronounced hu or ph=f
The French word "dauphin" is pronounced as "doh-fanh." The "ph" is pronounced as an "f" sound.
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The name "Pham" is pronounced as "fam", where the "ph" makes an "f" sound and the "a" is pronounced similar to the "a" in "cat".
In Hebrew, the "pH" sound is represented by the letter "פ" (Pey), which can have a "f" sound when it has a dot (dagesh) inside it, making it pronounced as "P." Without the dot, it is pronounced as "F." To achieve the "pH" sound specifically, one would typically use the "פ" (Pey) without the dagesh, making it sound like "F."
The "ph" sound is a digraph, which is a combination of two letters that represent a single sound. In words like "phone" or "photo," the "ph" sound is pronounced as an "f."
the ph in elephant make an "f" sound so its pronounced elefant
The term "phishing" is pronounced the same as the word "fishing". The 'ph' has an '"f" sound like phone, pharmacy, or phonetic. The "PH" stands for "Personal History" as the scammer is usually posing as a legitimate interest who needs your information.
It is pronounced Stephan in French.
Phthalo Blue is pronounced as "thal-oh blue." The "ph" is pronounced like an "f," and the "th" is pronounced as a soft "th" sound, similar to "thin." The emphasis is on the first syllable, "thal."
The word "photini" is pronounced as "foh-TEE-nee." The emphasis is on the second syllable, and the "ph" is pronounced like an "f." The "o" is pronounced as a long vowel sound, similar to the "o" in "photo."
Generally speaking, words with ph derive from Greek, which uses the digraph phi for the f sound ( although originally it was pronounced p+h, as in up-hill or hop-house).