• @Lulzagna
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    1462 months ago

    Downvoted for the title. Not sure what kind of mouth breather trend that is, but it’s not lasting

    • @[email protected]
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      2 months ago

      I remember a person on Reddit using this.

      þ- th sounding /θ/ (think)
      ð- th sounding /ð/ (the)

      As to why… I hope OP tells us.

      • @ChronosTriggerWarning
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        122 months ago

        I’ve seen them explain it elsewhere. As i recall, they liked the reaction it got, and do it for that.

      • Logi
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        112 months ago

        They’re still missing the “e” from “ðe”. That’s what bothers me.

        • _NoName_
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          72 months ago

          I think It was common in middle English to omit the ‘e’, leaving it to context for the reader to infer the meaning. I see this in alot of shorthand and other alphabets like Shavian.

          • @lunarul
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            32 months ago

            leaving it to context for the reader to infer the meaning

            So the same way we differentiate between the two sounds “th” can make?

            • _NoName_
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              12 months ago

              Kinda, yeah. The difference is that it’s not a per-word basis where you have to memorize dozens of cases. Much less cumbersome on learners. There’s nothing wrong with just writing ‘ðe’ either, if the writer prefers.

            • Tanis Nikana
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              102 months ago

              80% of your comment history is bent on those letters. Is that all you want to be known for?

              • @BigPotato
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                162 months ago

                None of us will be “known” for anything on this website. It will all fade. Let them try to be quirky to rage against oblivion, it hardly impacts your life.

                In fact, I’m thankful for the stupid trend because I had no idea how to read some of those names in Fire Emblem: Heroes.

                • Tanis Nikana
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                  82 months ago

                  Eh, fair.

                  But English is hard enough without that kind of dickery.

              • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkinOP
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                -172 months ago

                Are ðose letters really so offensive to you ðat ðey warrant being what you define someone else by?

                • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ
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                  192 months ago

                  It’s more that it makes your posts hard to read for no reason other than a painfully transparent and desperate cry to be “unique” and “quirky.” That said, you do you, man.

                • Tanis Nikana
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                  92 months ago

                  Lovely, that you paint me as “offended by these letters.”

                  You don’t know me.

                  Go back to your fucking ð.

                  • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkinOP
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                    -142 months ago

                    Words definitely not spoken by someone who’s offended by letters.

                    Go back to crying about it.

        • @apostrofail
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          2 months ago

          I support.

          Æsþetically it looks dense & unique like ð rare, sunderly dental fricative sounds English makes. “ð” isn’t historic since Old English really didn’t boðer ƿiþ separating voiced vs. unvoiced dental, but ðat’s okay since our broðers up norþ in Iceland use ðese 2 characters in ð manner you prescribe. I like ð mirroring a as ð single-character definite vs. indefinite article too. As someone around ESL (English as a second language) speakers, it can help ðem not only knoƿ hƿich sound to make hƿile preventing silly slip-ups like former US president Donald Trump saying Þighland instead of Thailand—but it ƿould be obvious if our ƿritten form ƿasn’t forced to drop þorn for overloading “y” or “th” for ð printing press’ limitations not built for our tongue.

          Before computers or printing presses, ƿe didn’t have spellcheck—so folks spelled ƿords as ðey sound. Having less digraphs favoring more single characters is considered more ergonomic; Dvorak, ð keyboard layout, has “ht” on the home roƿ of ð dominant hand to shoƿ just hoƿ dominant ðis digraph truly is for typing English.

          • Mr. Satan
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            412 months ago

            Look, english spelling is already a mess for me to parse (non-native speaker). If y’all start using this other alphabet, I’m just not gonna bother reading.

            “Oh no! Anyway” kind of comment, but I must protest somehow.

            • Flying Squid
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              292 months ago

              Yeah, I think this is a pretty shitty way to behave on a website with a large number of non-native English speakers.

              • _NoName_
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                52 months ago

                I think the real shitty part is the English itself, not letter changes.

                We could do the nice thing and make an easier language the standard? Spanish maybe? Could also do German. /s

              • @[email protected]
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                -112 months ago

                Do you think it’s shitty for black people in America to use African American English dialect on public forums where non-native speakers could see it? Same deal, just different levels of familiarity. Nothing is forcing anyone to engage with this post, but a lot of people seem to feel a strong enough desire to enforce social conformity that they go out of their way to complain about someone doing something different.

                • Flying Squid
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                  2 months ago

                  No. Not same deal. One is dialect with slang, which is readable, and which you can just easily look up if you don’t know.

                  The other is using letters that even most native English speakers can’t parse.

                  Also, comparing this person’s nonsense to an ethnic group’s way of speaking is highly offensive. I hope you realize that.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    -62 months ago

                    No. Not same deal. One is dialect with slang, which is readable, and which you can just easily look up if you don’t know.

                    I couldn’t read OP’s post so I looked it up and now I can. All it takes is a little effort, which if you’re not willing to expend you can simply move on.

                    The other is using letters that even most native English speakers can’t parse.

                    Sure African American English (which is not just slang, but an entire dialect with a different set of grammatical rules) is common and recognizable to most native English speakers now, but there was a time when it was just as inscrutable to them as OP’s post.

                    Also, comparing this person’s nonsense to an ethnic group’s way of speaking is highly offensive. I hope you realize that.

                    I get that you think you’re being progressive by getting offended on others’ behalf, but all you’re really doing is using that ethnic group’s struggle as a rhetorical device to shame me for having a dissenting opinion. I am comparing them because they are alike in a way that is relevant to my point, not because I think they are identical.

            • @apostrofail
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              -42 months ago

              Ban ñ from Spanish! My language does not have this character!

              Non-native speakers tend to mess up dental fricatives in speech as is. This usage is a good reminder as a character for a sound your language doesn’t have… a lot of languages “th” is pronounced as English “t” which implies aspiration like in Thomas. It is just like learning any other non-Romantic language & is literally in Icelandic—not some made-up character.

          • ɔiƚoxɘup
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            2 months ago

            This was a little easier than reading finnegans Wake but not much. Definitely more humorous though. Thank you.

          • Logi
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            32 months ago

            Why do you persist in writing “ð” rather than “ðe” for “the”? And… Do you really say æsþetic and not æstetic? Where are you from to do that?

            FWIW, do not support, even as a brother up north. English spelling is broken but there are more glaring problems to fix first.

            • @apostrofail
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              2 months ago

              Why should the indefinite article, “a”, a single character but the definite article, “the”, takes 3 chars? You know those that created our more modern English decided to respell could with -ould just for symmetry with would & should (Old English was cūþe, with our boy thorn for a dental fricative ending)—so it isn’t like words never changed to look nicer. Middle English often wrote the “the” as þͤ. /ðə/ is the normal transcription. “ð” without specially markers seems fine: single char for a very common word while indicating that it is a voiced sound (meaning not the unvoiced þ).

              Aesthetic comes from Greek αἰσθητικός. θ is an unvoiced dental fricative (also the symbol in IPA) just like our boy þ (descended from the Futhark ᚦ). All transcriptions of English dialects I found show it with the “th” in pronunciation… so if you aren’t using a unvoiced dental fricative, you would be the weird one. 🙃

              I would agree that fixing the vowels should be a higher priority. But English does not fit a five-vowel system like most Latin languages whose letters were shoehorned onto English. The only way to fix it (ignoring the dialectal splits) would be to either invent an entirely new writing system or going back to the system prior to Latin script adoption since the old system more properly encoded English sounds with few diagraphs & many more vowels to work with. In the latter case you would go for the Anglo-Saxon runes brought to the British Isles by the Angles, Saxons, & Jutes. With modernization, I would support this too tho 😅

              • Logi
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                02 months ago

                Right, so you’re just arbitrarily changing words. That’s very nice.

                • @apostrofail
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                  2 months ago

                  In recent years tho & thru have been increasingly more common than though & through. Common words tend to do this—the is a top-10 usage word in English. Makes sense.

                  Look on how you go from Latin ET/et to &. Turns a common word into a single symbol. Or similar a (and an) coming from Old English ān with cognates in Old Frisian, German, Norse, Saxon, and Gothic with forms like “ein” further being reduced.

                  If there is a historical precendence for this happening, there is no reason to assume the language’s writing would not, could not, or should not evolve similarly.

            • @apostrofail
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              12 months ago

              They are weirder ones for sure since they look like Ps without extra training. But just slapping two Vs or Us together like the Romans is a hack compared to the historic ƿ (from Runic ᚹ).

              But even stranger is why on Earth were “hw” flipped by printing press folks after hundreds of years with the h first due to pronunciation… I wouldn’t be surprised if the voiceless labial–velar fricative went out of fashion based the new spelling to where many (maybe most) speakers don’t differentiate between “w” & “wh”.

        • @[email protected]
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          -32 months ago

          You don’t get it, I find it annoying so you should cater to me. STOP HAVING FUN BECAUSE I FEEL EXCLUDED!!!1!1!1

          /s

    • @freddydunningkruger
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      -32 months ago

      Is a fucked up sense of outrage supposed to make you look internet cool? Hey check me out, I’m acting more concerned about something stupid the OP did than I am about the alarming content they just shared, isn’t my personality so edgy?

      And announcing your downvote, you’re like the reincarnation of Oscar Wilde over there.

    • Dragon Rider (drag)
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      2 months ago

      It’s not a trend. The way you and drag are speaking is the trend. Phlubbadubba is speaking Old English. You’re right, though, it didn’t last.

      • @[email protected]
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        -12 months ago

        The conversation I had with drag before about drag’s reasons for speaking this way shifted my perspective enough that Phlubbadubba’s use of Old English doesn’t bother me the way it probably would have before. I understood drag, but seeing how negatively people are responding to a tiny bit of Old English makes me appreciate drag. Keep it up.