阞n幓呂 about 'ough'
Curious me always wondered what the deal was with all these random silent letters in English and why there were so many sounds a letter could be, not to mention the number of letters than can make a sound.
The letters b, l, n, and k are just a few that can add nothing whatsoever to the sound or meaning of a word. Urgh. Or rather, ough how does anyone even pronounce that?
Studying linguistics made it all the more apparent some of the reasons why, but English itself is essentially inadequate in describing how something sounds in relation to its written system (its orthography) because you have to take into account intonation and accents as well, which the alphabet cannot really do. But there is a way us linguists use which is a nifty, not-so-little alphabet of all the sounds possible within human speech. From every language and dialect. From every inhabited continent and country. Every. Last. Sound.
One boring morning during lockdown I decided to elaborate on this concept of English being a bad language to spell in as it infuriated me. Or is that mee, or mey, or 鳥梗梗梗梗梗 Who knows? The International Phonetic Alphabet helps eliminate this ambiguity to focus on the sounds in question. So, with levels hitting maximum for boredom, irksomeness, and confusion for that supposedly new word furlough, I took pen to paper or hand to keyboard in a bid to vent in poetic form. I introduce my poem Inuff about Ough to anyone who desires to preach the need for a phonetic alphabet, for all who wish to spell with a little more ease and for everyone to simply ponder about and enjoy.
Inuff about Ough
The dialects of Britain can be quite tough
With weirdly spelt words like the ending in rough
Why is it that the sound ough in enough
Is not spelt like uff in cuff or puff?
Who said it should be that ought in thought
Is spoken the same as in short and taught?
Why is the ough in drought or plough
Unlike the ow and now and cow?
How can it have unique cases too
Like ough in hiccough, but differently in through?
We now write up, should we not write oo?
Though we could write it as in true or shoe.
Who said it cant be colough not colour
When that is closer to thorough and borough?
Theres another in Irish and one in Scottish
Muddying our spelling into gibberish;
The ough and the ough in lough and in clough
One has been fixed but the other has not
Although the ough in furlough and dough
Are not like no, nor bow and toe,
The simpler spellings have versions abound
Even though theyre all the same sound
Why is this language so unable to spell?
How can we reverse this spelling hell?
Well thankfully there is already a way
Linguists know it as the IPA.
One way to spell things no need to decide,
No strange spellings with other sounds inside.
With och, ock and u, then uff, up and oo,
Theres ow, oh and or, with one left to doo,
We left off to the end as in cough and trough
Because English spelling can go and ghiss ough!
I hope that now people see what an illogical system this really is. And ough yes; here is the list of pronunciations of our strange friend ough. Even native speakers sometimes struggle, let alone speakers to whom it is not their primary language. Words in brackets are the IPA transcriptions of the words pronunciation.
- /x/ or och in Lough /lx/ (Archaic Scoottish)
- /k/ or ock in Clough /klk/, Hough /hk/ (Irish & Archaic English since amended)
- // or u in Thorough /庛伄/
- /幓呂/ or uff in Enough /阞n幓呂/
- /幓吠/ or up in Hiccough /h阞k幓吠/ (Archaic English since amended)
- /u/ or oo in Through /庛伄u/
- // or oh in Dough /d/
- /a/ or ow in Plough /pla/
- // or or in Thought /庛t/
- /f/ or off in Trough /t伄f/
Yes a mess. No wonder we were all confused when furlough became a new lockdown buzzword.
Written by DP, Digital Student Ambassador.

Visit us
Discover what sets Sheffield apart at our undergraduate open days on Saturday 21 June and Saturday 5 July 2025.