Reading this shit gives me an aneurism.

  • timroerstroem@feddit.dk
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    22 hours ago

    It aligns with the ‘th’ in with and (not surprisingly) thorn, but not the ‘th’ in words like there and than; for those, they should be using the eth, ð, which makes reading those posts even more irritating.

    • SlurpingPus@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      The person in the screenshot replied to one such comment that ‘ð’ fell out of use in English by the Middle Ages or by Early Modern English, I forget which — while the thorn remained yet.

    • mkwt@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      Finally, these two letters, thorn and eth, dropped out of English a long time ago, but they’re still in Modern Icelandic today.

    • neclimdul@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      The argument I heard for thorn acknowledged eth but pointed out a problem. In English our letters correspond to rough shapes of sounds. They often get moved around and changed by dialects. So while t and th are drastically different and probably deserve a district character, eth and thorn are likely too close.

      Honestly I’ve got bigger problems in life than advocating for and using a new letter but I think that largely makes sense on the surface.