• Hegar
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    209 hours ago

    If you’re going to use eth I just wish you’d use a vowel for ‘the’. No other consonants imply vowels in english.

    • PhlubbaDubbaOP
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      -299 hours ago

      Borrowed from Shavian, where ð equivalent letter, as well as four oðer consonants, actually do imply ð full word.

      Used for words wið specific grammar purposes, n for and, f for for, v for of, and t for to.

      • @muix@lemmy.sdf.org
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        6 hours ago

        What makes you choose þ or ð? In Icelandic it’s the difference between voiced and voiceless.

      • Hegar
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        129 hours ago

        Interesting. Shaw specified that shavian alphabet should be a complete replacement to avoid the jarring appearance of misspelling though right? Porting those conventions into standard english orthography seems to violate that.

        • PhlubbaDubbaOP
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          -158 hours ago

          Meh, why waste a perfectly usable convention when you’re not gonna use ð alphabet it was originally used in?

          • @Astronauticaldb@lemmy.world
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            87 hours ago

            It’s because language changes gradually over time. Most people who aren’t English Majors or have a Linguistics degree don’t even know what a Thorn is, and I don’t even blame them. (Also the fact that no Middle English characters are on my keyboard, closest I have to a dead symbol is ‽)