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<p>I remember having that conversation when I was teaching. One of the trainers was an English guy, who said it was ok to teach haitch if that was how we said it. Everyone looked at him as though he was mental. There were teachers from the US, Canada, South Africa, Australia, UK, NZ, and not one pronounced the letter in that fucking awful way.</p>
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Hate it. Fairly widespread in my experience of West Island.<br><br>
What is more annoying is the insistence on prouncing the L in Norfolk or Holmes.<br><br>
More recently I've heard "onn-ly" or "fokkis" (for focus). With short vowels instead of long. Seems to be a Queensland thing. -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="Crucial" data-cid="609294" data-time="1472212909"><p>I used to hear it regularly in Oz and put it down to poor breeding. Have been encountering it a bit in the UK as well so my theory still stands</p></blockquote>
Remember: those people in the UK are the ones your weird vowels base themselves on. -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="NTA" data-cid="609339" data-time="1472247813"><p>
Remember: those people in the UK are the ones your weird vowels base themselves on.</p></blockquote>
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What's the source of rhe Aussie accent? Recessive genetics caused the population to sport undescended testicles? <br><br>
Back on topic haitch is one of those petty irritations like people saying fillem instead of film or chicks putting half a dozen extra pillows on the bed you have to remove before you can actually use the bed that are probably the reason the uber killer tipped over the edge. -
Asked my son what he says and its haitch. I just realised I do too, but my accent is pretty farked up these days. I get routinely mistaken for a South African and even a Pom (that person is dead to me). My wife is Norwegian but sometimes people think I'm the Norwegian one.
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<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="Rancid Schnitzel" data-cid="609431" data-time="1472266881">
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<p>Asked my son what he says and<strong> its haitch. I just realised I do too,</strong> but my accent is pretty farked up these days. I get routinely mistaken for a South African and even a Pom (that person is dead to me). My wife is Norwegian but sometimes people think I'm the Norwegian one.</p>
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<p> :shock: So have fun cheering for your boy Pocock and your Wallabies tonight then.</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="jegga" data-cid="609382" data-time="1472254009">
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<p>Sounds legit.</p>
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<p>Definitely in some places. I couldn't believe how few flies there were when I first moved to Sydney from the bush. Then some old bloke told me the brand new apartment complex I was renting in was built on an old military chemical storage :shock:</p> -
<p>Used to work with a girl who said "haitch". Banned her from using the radio at work. Problem solved.</p>
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<p>Disgraceful pronunciation that made my skin crawl. </p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="mooshld" data-cid="610620" data-time="1472471177"><p>Some Irish use haitch as well</p></blockquote>
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My understanding was that the Australian use of haitch has originates from catholic schools and Irish nuns. <br>
That's what I was told when living there anyway. -
<p>Further to this topic, one of my work colleagues always calls me Haitch, which I dislike. He also calls my friend (who is named Hugh) Thew.</p>
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<p>My colleague is Cornish.</p>
H