Quote:
Originally Posted by Jill
OH NO!!! I might have to TURN A PAGE before I get the context in a book? Whatever will I do?
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This is what you would do if you were reading it out loud: you would sound a bit stupid if you had to correct your pronunciation.
Answer this: Why do the authorities that look after the other major languages of Europe all choose to avoid heterophonic homographs in their orthographies?
And answer this: If you think context is not a problem, can you state the context rules for disambiguating the 500 or so heterophonic homographs in English in such a way that one can use these rules to program a computer to read text out loud flawlessly? If you think this isn't important, ask any blind person about the inadequacies of screen reader software. Good screen readers do get it right most of the time, but some words always cause problems.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jill
Good grief, man, you are really reaching here. Again, I have to know if you're serious. Have you seen a dictionary? Ever?
Tell me something; does the word 'run' "stand on its own"? Do you know what I mean when I yell the following sentence?
"RUN!"
No, you say? How can that be? It's an entire sentence. It's a single word, "standing on its own." It's a pretty straight-forward spelling.
What words would you suggest for the 200+ meanings of 'run', so that they're entirely different, not reliant on different spellings (how many fucking ways could there be to spell 'run' anyway?), without needing context?
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Now look who's reaching. You're making personal attacks (the fallacy of
argumentum ad hominem), and the straw man fallacy.
Why do you make up this shit about my suggesting that the word "run" must have 200 plus different spellings to go with 200 plus different meanings when every one of those meanings has essentially
the same pronunciation? I have not said that we need different spellings in this case; in fact I have explicitly said the opposite in an
earlier post in this thread.
You have chosen not to answer any of my other questions regarding spellings. I'm not surprised: some of the spellings we must put up with due to the forces of tradition and social conformity are truly indefensible when scrutinized objectively.
Ultimately, the spellings we have in English are nothing more than a tradition. Some traditions don't always stand up to scrutiny. If we always stuck with bad traditions, in the USA only men with land would have the vote.