H

Hêy (uppercase: H, lowercase: h) is the eighteenth letter in Orish. Its sound is /h/ or /ɦ/, glottal fricative.

Pronunciation
Although the sound of the letter H is called fricative, this is not a real fricative consonant, but a non-syllabic phonation that comes before or after a vowel or a semivowel. To pronounce it, just open your mouth and blow air through it, and create some friction (but not as much as with other fricatives) with your vocal cords. This sound doesn't have a specific lips or tongue position, but the lips and the tongue should not block the air at all; only the vowel before or after this sound can affect the position of the lips and the tongue when pronouncing this sound. If this sound comes before or after a low or a mid vowel the friction is created low in your throat, and if this sound comes before or after a high vowel or a semivowel the friction is created behind the tongue. That's because in low and mid vowels the tongue is not high enough to create a friction so the vocal chords create the friction alone, while in high vowels and semivowels the tongue is high enough to create a friction so it takes the role of creating the friction from the vocal cords.

This sound is basically unvoiced, but pronouncing it as a voiced sound is not a mistake as long as it doesn't sound like it doesn't exist. The voiced one is actually a breathy sound, a combination of the glottal friction and the "true" voice. However, for people who don't know to pronounce glottal fricatives at all, the unvoiced one the the recommended one, because it's easier to make only the glottal friction than to combine it with the "true" voice.