What to call words like uh, um, uh-huh, hmm (2025)

VenusEnvy

Senior Member

Maryland, USA

English, United States

  • Dec 5, 2006
  • #1

Hi everyone! Recently, I wrote a long paper on words such as those in the title and how their meanings change according to intonation. My professor advised me to refer to them as utterances. But, having spoken with a collegue of his, he says that he misspoke and that utterances is not the correct term. He suggested interjections, then threw it out. I came up with mumblings, but it doesn't sound very correct to me.

Does anyone know what to call these words/sound/utterances/mumblings?

Maybe grunts?

::still thinking::

[An academic thesis I found] calls them non-lexical conversation sounds.

<Moderator note: this post originally contained a link to the paper in pdf format but the document has been removed>

Last edited by a moderator:

  • P

    palomnik

    Senior Member

    Thailand

    English

    • Dec 5, 2006
    • #2

    From a sociolinguistic viewpoint they may well be "non-lexical conversation sounds." From the point of view of traditional grammar, they are interjections. Perhaps the grammatical term deserves to be scrapped, though, on the basis of being too vague.

    JamesM

    Senior Member

    Los Angeles, California

    English, USA

    • Dec 5, 2006
    • #3

    I remember watching a video on spoken English that called them "filler sounds". I thought that was an accurate description, if not very technical.

    1

    . 1

    Banned

    Ferntree Gully

    Australian Australia

    • Dec 5, 2006
    • #4

    expletive 2 any syllable, word or phrase conveying no independent meaning, especially one inserted in a line of verse for the sake of the metre.

    .,,

    Joelline

    Senior Member

    USA (W. Pennsylvania)

    American English

    • Dec 5, 2006
    • #5

    I believe they are generally called vocal pauses. I've also heard them called (informally) "fillers."

    S

    swiss_alps

    Member

    English, New Zealand

    • Dec 5, 2006
    • #6

    They are called vocalized pauses. My boyfriend, who is a journalist, once interviewed a writer he respected immensely — and, in the published transcript of the interview, he left in a few of the times the man said "you know," "like," "mmh" and "ah." It's pretty standard, since without any elements of colloquial speech, a written interview will look preternaturally contrived and formal.

    The writer was livid, and promptly sent him an e-mail, "What's up with all the verbalized pauses, man?"

    That vivid introduction acquainted us both with the term.

    VenusEnvy

    Senior Member

    Maryland, USA

    English, United States

    • Dec 6, 2006
    • #7

    Thank you all for shedding some light on this for me. I knew I came here for a reason. What to call words like uh, um, uh-huh, hmm (5)

    SaritaMija

    Senior Member

    Minnesota, USA

    English-United States

    • Dec 6, 2006
    • #8

    My acting teacher in highschool called them audible pauses

    caballoschica

    Senior Member

    buried under organic chem text books

    english/usa

    • Dec 6, 2006
    • #9

    Fillers! Last year my public speaking professor used the word, "Fillers."

    Add "like" to that list, also.

    fenixpollo

    Senior Member

    American English

    • Dec 14, 2006
    • #10

    Filler words is the standard name for these in basic English classes. Chaska has an interesting thread on the subject in Cultural Discussions. What to call words like uh, um, uh-huh, hmm (9)

    Saludos, Venus!

    S

    SpanishStudent_39

    Senior Member

    USA (English)

    • Dec 14, 2006
    • #12

    I would agree with interjections and Filler words. I wouldn't say expletive, that can mean an obscene exclamation.

    caballoschica

    Senior Member

    buried under organic chem text books

    english/usa

    • Dec 14, 2006
    • #13

    Josh Adkins said:

    I once took a cross-cultural communication class and the term used to describe sounds like these as well as other concomitant elements aiding in communication was 'paralanguage'. Of course, colloquially I would most likely just call them filler words.

    http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/paralanguage

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paralanguage

    It appears to me, as if 'paralanguage' is used mainly for body language and tone fluctuation more than other words actually used. At least from these definitions, is what I gather.

    jess oh seven

    Senior Member

    Scotland

    UK/US English

    • Mar 22, 2007
    • #14

    What is the technical name for "filler" words/utterances such as "like", "well", "um", etc?

    Thanks What to call words like uh, um, uh-huh, hmm (12)

    Siberia

    Senior Member

    UK-Wales - English

    • Mar 22, 2007
    • #15

    Redundancy

    jess oh seven

    Senior Member

    Scotland

    UK/US English

    • Mar 22, 2007
    • #16

    thank you What to call words like uh, um, uh-huh, hmm (15)

    T

    Tabac

    Senior Member

    Pacific Northwest (USA)

    U. S. - English

    • Mar 22, 2007
    • #17

    jess oh seven said:

    What is the technical name for "filler" words/utterances such as "like", "well", "um", etc?

    Thanks What to call words like uh, um, uh-huh, hmm (16)

    Articulated pause.

    I

    ishmealm

    New Member

    English

    • Nov 14, 2011
    • #18

    disfluencies

    C

    Cagey

    post mod (English Only / Latin)

    California

    English - US

    • Nov 14, 2011
    • #19

    In this related thread, someone refers to such a sound as a 'hesitation syllable': Pronunciation: um, erm

    O

    obi333

    New Member

    ENGLISH - USA

    • Aug 26, 2014
    • #20

    Tabac said:

    Articulated pause.

    , These sounds, ("words") to which you refer, and correctly knownas "Vocal Segregates"...

    JamesM

    Senior Member

    Los Angeles, California

    English, USA

    • Aug 26, 2014
    • #21

    I think vocal segregates might be a little too vague. For example, some definitions of vocal segregates include silent pauses, while others include grunts of approval or uncertainty in response to someone else talking.

    "Fillers" or "vocal/verbalized pauses" seem to be the most consistent definitions that match the original poster's question, in my opinion.

    A

    Angietlb

    New Member

    US English

    • Sep 7, 2014
    • #22

    We always called them word whispers

    S

    spidermacao__

    New Member

    english - india

    • Oct 19, 2014
    • #23

    onomatopoeia.

    Andygc

    Senior Member

    Devon

    British English

    • Oct 19, 2014
    • #24

    Safiya Jasmine

    New Member

    Chinese

    • Dec 27, 2023
    • #25

    They are called Fillers (linguistics). Words or sounds used without meaning, like "umm" "err" "ah" "uh".

    Enquiring Mind

    Senior Member

    UK/Česká republika

    English - the King's

    • Dec 27, 2023
    • #26

    I would also call them "fillers" (welcome to the forum, Safiya Jasmine!) but, as we see from the previous posts in this thread, there is no consensus, with suggestions ranging between technical terms and casual layman's ad-hoc expressions not based on any serious study.

    If you're writing a paper (#1), the thing to do is choose terms that you feel are right for the purposes of your paper, define what you are using those terms to mean in the paper, and be consistent in using the terms you chose.

    natkretep

    Moderato con anima (English Only)

    Singapore

    English (Singapore/UK), basic Chinese

    • Dec 27, 2023
    • #27

    Yes, that's the consensus: 'fillers' or 'vocalised pauses'.

    dojibear

    Senior Member

    Fresno CA

    English (US - northeast)

    • Dec 27, 2023
    • #28

    I think there is a narrow meaning and a wide meaning.

    The narrow meaning is words like "umm" "err" "ah" and "uh", that don't express meaning or change meaning. They only prevent someone else from speaking, allowing the speaker to "still have the floor" while finding new words. The term "filler" works for that, I think.

    The wider meaning includes fillers and other sounds that are used in conversations (in every language) but aren't official "words" that are part of the official "grammar". Many of these are used in speech but are not used in writing. The term "paralanguage" is probably good for that.

    The wikipedia article paralanguage mentions (in English) sighs, gasps, groans, laughter, clearing the throat, fillers, and "huh?" Non-verbal things include nodding and other gestures and facial expressions. Some of these things are used by listeners: it isn't considered "interrupting the speaker" if words aren't used.

    ewie

    Senior Member

    Manchester

    English English

    • Dec 27, 2023
    • #29

    My vote also goes to fillers What to call words like uh, um, uh-huh, hmm (24)

    Trabuqueña

    New Member

    Wesham, Kirkham, Preston UK

    British English

    • Dec 31, 2023
    • #30

    From 5 different websites or YouTube videos, these were the results:

    filler words and discourse markers

    Filler words

    Filler words, filled pauses, hesitation markers, thinking sounds discourse markers

    Filler words

    Filler words

    Therefore, fillers or filler words get my vote

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    What to call words like uh, um, uh-huh, hmm (2025)

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