mother
noun
  1. a term of address for an elderly woman
  2. a term of address for a mother superior
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. More at Wordnik

The relation between written and spoken language in English is very complex. There is not much to about that, the spelling and pronunciation just are like they are. Most other current languages are much more consistent in this respect. If your native language is pretty consistent it might be somewhat hard for somebody learning English to accept this isn't the case there.

For comparison have a look at the poem "The Chaos" written to demonstrate this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Chaos

Dearest creature in Creation,

Studying English pronunciation,

I will teach you in my verse

Sounds like corpse, corps, horse and worse.

...

Answer from idspispopd on Stack Exchange
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Wiktionary
en.wiktionary.org › wiki › mother
mother - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
mother (disambiguation)Wikipedia · [edit] (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈmʌðə/ (General American) IPA(key): /ˈmʌðɚ/ (General Australian, New Zealand) IPA(key): /ˈmɐðə/ (Northern England) IPA(key): /ˈmʊðə/ (Ireland) IPA(key): /ˈmʊðəɹ/ (Scotland, Northern Ireland) IPA(key): /ˈmʌðəɹ/ Rhymes: -ʌðə(ɹ) Hyphenation: moth‧er ·
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Cambridge Dictionary
dictionary.cambridge.org › us › pronunciation › english › mother
How to pronounce MOTHER in English
How to pronounce MOTHER. How to say MOTHER. Listen to the audio pronunciation in the Cambridge English Dictionary. Learn more.
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Encyclopedia Britannica
britannica.com › dictionary › eb › audio
How to Pronounce mother - (Audio) | Britannica Dictionary
Meta description: Hear the pronunciation of mother in American English, spoken by real native speakers. From North America's leading language experts, Britannica Dictionary
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YouGlish
youglish.com › pronounce › mother › english › us
Mother | 78317 pronunciations of Mother in American English
Self-record & review: Record yourself saying 'mother' in sentences. Listen back to identify areas for improvement. YouTube Pronunciation Guides: Search YouTube for how to pronounce 'mother' in English.
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ELSA
elsaspeak.com › en › learn-english › how-to-pronounce › mother
How to Pronounce MOTHER in American English | ELSA Speak
Practice pronunciation of the word mother with ELSA advanced technology and say mother like Americans.
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Bab.la
en.bab.la › pronunciation › english › mother
What is the pronunciation of 'mother' in English?
Learn how to say 'mother' in English with audio and example in sentences
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EasyPronunciation
easypronunciation.com › en › english › word › mother
Mother — Pronunciation: HD Slow Audio + Phonetic Transcription
How to pronounce 'mother' in English. Normal and slow speed HD audio recordings and phonetic transcription written with International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA).
Find elsewhere
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Forvo
forvo.com › word › mother
How to pronounce mother in English - Definition and synonyms of mother in English
The mother-to-be was excited about the birth of her baby. pronunciation
Published   March 13, 2023
Top answer
1 of 2
4

The relation between written and spoken language in English is very complex. There is not much to about that, the spelling and pronunciation just are like they are. Most other current languages are much more consistent in this respect. If your native language is pretty consistent it might be somewhat hard for somebody learning English to accept this isn't the case there.

For comparison have a look at the poem "The Chaos" written to demonstrate this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Chaos

Dearest creature in Creation,

Studying English pronunciation,

I will teach you in my verse

Sounds like corpse, corps, horse and worse.

...

2 of 2
1

Mother Does Not Sound Like Mather; It Sounds More like Muther

Proper spelling is an inherently flawed art that natural languages are generally unable to perfect. The problem is that to have one letter represent every possible sound might possibly require more letters than can be easily remembered, so some do double or even triple duty, and this is most particularly a feature of vowels. We have five vowels with at least ten usual forms: long and short. Furthermore, dialectical variance can give us a great deal more than that. American English is typically estimated to have thirteen vowel sounds, whereas Received Pronunciation has twenty. Remember, the actual English Alphabet only has 26 letters, and it is derived from the Latin alphabet which only has 23 letters. Having a separate letter for every vowel sound would require us to nearly double the length of the alphabet.

In A Grammar of the English Language by Samuel Johnson goes into a great amount of detail regarding how different letters are pronounced. You can see that the vowels can be used in quite a number of ways depending on the word, and some of these overlap similarly to c.

Johnson specifically writes this about the A in father:

A open is the a of the Italian, or nearly resembles it; as father, rather, congratulate, fancy, glass.

You might also note that the more Italian Mama uses the same a as in father, which may be part of the root of your child's frustration.

However, Johnson also notes that short u has a couple of sounds.

O is long, as bōne, ōbedient, corrōding; or short, as blŏck, knŏck, ŏblique, lŏll.

[…]

The short o has sometimes the sound of a close u, as son, come.


Compare son to sun, and I think you can start to get a grasp of the problem here. Some vowels have overlap, and the short o not only overlaps with u, but it also overlaps with open a and these are two distinct sounds.

The open a and the short o exemplified block and knock sounds more like the a in father, but the o in mother actually sounds more like the one in sun. Indeed, this is probably why some people call their mother Mum for short, and it also explains why some dialects slur mother into mutter.

To demonstrate the difference textually, I am going to have to resort to showing the International Phonetic Alphabet transcriptions of the word from the Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus's pronunciations of Mother and Father respectively.

Father "U.K. ​ /ˈfɑː.ðər/ U.S. ​ /ˈfɑː.ðɚ/"
Mother: "U.K.​ /ˈmʌð.ər/ U.S. ​ /ˈmʌð.ɚ/ "

I must admit I never did quite learn how to read I.P.A. myself, but I can observe the differences between the spellings. The takeaway here is that according to Cambridge, the ɑ following the F in father is a distinct sound from the ʌ in mother, but the ʌ in mother is shared by son, sun, and other whereas the a in father sounds more like the o in dot, otter, daughter or bother.

The exclamations ah and uh best exemplifies the difference in the sounds in mother and father respectively, because these two words isolate the pronunciation of those vowels.

Whereas O has overlap with A and U, A and U do not have quite as much overlap. I can not think of many cases where the letter A is pronounced anything like the letter U. The only instance I can think of off of the top of my head is the indefinite article, which is sometimes pronounced with a short u sound, but that is an exceptional word with two separate spellings and three separate pronunciations, so it would be a folly to use it as an example.

For the purposes of satisfying your sun son, it may suffice in this case to explain that the two words are spelled differently because they sound different. However, that will only last so long as he does not realize that some words are spelled using different letters and sound the same.

Orthography is Complicated, and It Is Especially So for Old Words

So why have overlap in the letters? Well, the art of orthography is not solely decided upon pronunciation alone. It is also decided in part upon etymological relationships in order to make it easier to recognize word families. Johnson explains this when describing overlap with the letter C for instance.

C might be omitted in the language without loss, since one of its sound might be supplied by s, and the other by k, but that it preserves to the eye the etymology of words, as face from facies, captive from captivus.

The need for matching orthography to etymology as well as pronunciation may not seem especially evident, but sometimes it helps to show that two words are related. Another example borrowed from Johnson's grammar is woman and women. Whereas woman actually sounds more or less like how it is spelled, women should be pronounced like wimen by sole right of pronunciation alone, but retaining the O helps to show that it is the same word as woman rendered into the plural form.

More importantly a language's stability is reliant upon memorization and tradition, so over the course of time the pronunciation of words can be perverted. Better record-keeping tends to mitigate against this trend, but the Gutenburg printing press was only invented around the 15th century and dictionaries only began to become popular around the 18th century and the very first audio recording is from the 19th century.

Mother is a much older than any of that, so it is not beyond cognition that it was greatly influenced by The Great Vowel Shift or some similar phenomena. Based upon what I can glean from The Online Etymology Dictionary by Douglas Harper, and Mum or Mom (or Mam) by Ashley Timms the word was originally from the baby-talk Ma, had the -ter kinship suffix slapped onto it so it was at some point pronounced like father, but somewhere along the line the pronunciation diverged. Proto-germanic used a long o based pronunciation, and the Romance languages kept the open a pronunciation.

The open A pronunciation may have been a compromise between the two, or this may have something to do in part from reduplication of Ma to make mama, which actually sounds somewhat like momma, which shortens to mom. This would gradually lengthen the noun possibly lead to a back-formation to mother.

Father does not have as clear of a path for this type of change. What is particularly noteworthy here, I think is that the P in Pa shifted to an F in Father, so a similar back formation derived from pa, papa, poppa and pop would not have made much sense, and I doubt that the vowel lengthens in the same way anyway.

Unfortunately this era of English isn't really something I know to investigate too well to confirm or deny the hypothesis. Not as many records survived and the orthography was not yet anywhere near as well settled as it is today.

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YouTube
youtube.com › watch
How to Pronounce MOTHER - #SHORTS Quick English Pronunciation Mini Lesson - YouTube
Learn how to pronounce the word MOTHER with this Quick English Pronunciation Mini Lesson. Mother is your mom, the person who gave birth and/or raised you. Th...
Published   November 21, 2021
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YouTube
youtube.com › cambridge dictionary
How to pronounce mother | British English and American English pronunciation - YouTube
Listen to the British English vs American English pronunciation of "mother". Then listen to pronunciations in an example sentence. You can look up the mea...
Published   April 22, 2023
Views   6K
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Oxford Learner's Dictionaries
oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com › definition › english › mother_1
mother noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes | Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary at OxfordLearnersDictionaries.com
Definition of mother noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.
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YouTube
youtube.com › watch
How to pronounce MOTHER in British English - YouTube
This video shows you how to pronounce MOTHER in British English. Speaker has an accent from Shetland, Scotland. https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/...
Published   March 14, 2018
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TikTok
tiktok.com › jennifer tarle (@tarlespeech) | tiktok › how to #pronounce mother #english #pronunciation mini lesson
How to #Pronounce MOTHER #English #Pronunciation Mini Lesson | TikTok
107 Likes, TikTok video from Jennifer Tarle (@tarlespeech): “How to #Pronounce MOTHER #English #Pronunciation Mini Lesson”. original sound - Jennifer Tarle.
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WordReference
forum.wordreference.com › english only › english only
Pronunciation: mother [AE] | WordReference Forums
January 26, 2025 - Click to expand... They represent the same pronunciation as far as General American is concerned. The former is IPA and the latter is Webster's phonetic transcription system. Webster's system looks superficially similar to IPA but is a separate system with its own set of conventions.
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Quora
quora.com › How-do-Americans-pronounce-mother-If-they-say-mom-instead-of-mum-must-it-be-pronounced-like-bother
How do Americans pronounce mother? If they say mom instead of mum, must it be pronounced like bother? - Quora
Answer (1 of 7): How do Americans pronounce mother? Americans use the same vowel as in brother or butter, that is to say [ʌ] in the International Phonetic Alphabet. If they say mom instead of mum, must it be pronounced like bother? No. I see what logic underlies your question: mom has the vow...