Thermal
August Member
It's the thing in the alphabet. OP says so.I am still trying to figure out what the "law" in all this is...
It's the thing in the alphabet. OP says so.I am still trying to figure out what the "law" in all this is...
And again the OP hasn't really made it any more explicit that what I gleaned from that graphic that was posted. Apparently he believes vowels may be simplified down to three variations on each of five elementary vowel sounds, and that any attempt by linguists to identify, categorize, and represent any more vowels than that stands in nefarious ignorance of this genius law.I am still trying to figure out what the "law" in all this is, other than an apparent recognition that alphabets tend at least to try to reflect the sounds we make when we speak, but what else that law says seems elusive.
And some of them cheat. å claims to be an a, but we all know it isn't.The Swedish alphabet has three more vowels than the English, btw, and I will not give up a single one of them!
Uvular scrape! I heard it! It was a uvular scrape! Moses supposes his toeses are roses, but Moses supposes erroneously."Fricative, you say? Ha! Stuff and nonsense! Name your weapon of choice, you scoundrel, and I will meet you at dawn to settle this matter once and for all."
While vacationing in the Caribbean I watched from afar as a Caiman Islands native conversed effortlessly with a woman from Minnesota. A non English speaker would probably never have recognized both those discourses as English.My first job in Geneva, I shared an office with a bloke from Quebec, a lady from Liège, and a bloke from Neuchâtel. We all spoke French but any unprepared learner would have had kittens trying to follow the conversation.
Ok, that sort of makes sense, but it seems to have little to do with the purpose of an alphabet, insofar as an alphabet is supposed to do the most efficient job of actually allowing people to learn quickly how to write the language they speak. The law, if there is one, might be of some interest to a linquist or a philologist, or a Noam Chomsky trying to figure out underlying grammar, but it doesn't seem very relevant to the question of what we should do in terms of making an alphabet for people to use. I'm thinking, for example, (as it seems others have) of the Cherokee syllabary, which has a multiplicity of characters and looks very complicated to us, yet was, according to accounts, so aptly adapted to the Cherokee language that it was quickly learned and resulted in a high degree of literacy.And again the OP hasn't really made it any more explicit that what I gleaned from that graphic that was posted. Apparently he believes vowels may be simplified down to three variations on each of five elementary vowel sounds, and that any attempt by linguists to identify, categorize, and represent any more vowels than that stands in nefarious ignorance of this genius law.
Sounds like a perfectly cromulent word to me.Sounds, like colours, are in the eyes and ears of the beholders and behearers (which is not a word, but I am allowed to invent them, since I am part of the linguist cabal)
Yet attempts to simplify or recast English spelling by imposition always fail. AIUI, we do simplify the orthography (see what I did there?) but it's always organic as with all other aspects of language.Ok, that sort of makes sense, but it seems to have little to do with the purpose of an alphabet, insofar as an alphabet is supposed to do the most efficient job of actually allowing people to learn quickly how to write the language they speak.
It actually doesn't, å is the au in fauteuil, and ö is the eui (there is a difference, but only the merest hint, in how open the vowels are. They seem to be indistinguishable, unless you're familiar with both French and Swedish).And some of them cheat. å claims to be an a, but we all know it isn't.
Licence to Trill.But I do relish the idea that linguists are evil schemers. It makes us sound as if we were international adventurers, with license to force people to use more vowels. This is not an image I have ever had the pleasure of meeting before, and it's very refreshing![]()
"Nothing is more futile than a temptation resisted"But I do relish the idea that linguists are evil schemers. It makes us sound as if we were international adventurers, with license to force people to use more vowels. This is not an image I have ever had the pleasure of meeting before, and it's very refreshing
Maybe I should introduce the op to Chomsky's transformational generative grammar? I think that would blow his mind (if it isn't already blown. I think it may be)!

Licence to Trill.
I am still trying to figure out what the "law" in all this is, other than an apparent recognition that alphabets tend at least to try to reflect the sounds we make when we speak, but what else that law says seems elusive.
I think that aptly applies to English spelling.Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law!
It must be that...