Comments
God_of_Thunda t1_iydc7lr wrote
U sounds like You
Y sounds like Why
W sounds like Double You.
There, spelled em out for ya!
BedBugger6-9 t1_iye1o3w wrote
1 out of 3 ain’t bad
WynterRayne t1_iycnf6h wrote
Meanwhile in the English alphabet (I call it that because it was made in England especially for use with the English language... and I hate eponyms, but it's usually called Shavian or the Shaw alphabet)...
Ado, up, ooze and yew (𐑩, 𐑳, 𐑵 𐑯 𐑿) are named with an example of how they're pronounced, and all are equivalent to different usages of the Latin 'u'.
Yea, if and eat (𐑘, 𐑦 𐑯 𐑰) are named with an example of how they're pronounced, and all are equivalent to different usages of the Latin 'y'.
Woe (𐑢) is named with an example of how it's pronounced, and is equivalent to the Latin 'w'.
mediaman54 t1_iye9hd9 wrote
I'm surprised this got past the filters. Oddities of language are against the rules.
Showerthoughts_Mod t1_iycir5e wrote
This is a friendly reminder to read our rules.
Remember, /r/Showerthoughts is for showerthoughts, not "thoughts had in the shower!"
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Rule-breaking posts may result in bans.
[deleted] t1_iycmbkf wrote
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[deleted] t1_iycpjaz wrote
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[deleted] t1_iyd1ev7 wrote
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pavilionaire2022 t1_iydj4js wrote
The letter 'h' doesn't have an h sound in it (at least in American accents), and the letter 'q' doesn't have a q sound in it. (It's kyoo, not quoo.)
Metarazzi t1_iyf3cfa wrote
Then there's these... — 'c' starts with an s-sound, ends with an e-sound, and is used like s and k, so why do we need it at all? — 'f, l, m, n, s, and x' start with an e-sound, then have their own ending sounds — 'g' and j starts with a sound that sounds like the other, so why do we need both? — 'h' starts with an a-sound — 'q' starts with a k-sound and finishes with a 'y' and 'w' sounds... get rid of it, too
Funetiks... hu needz it eneeway? Any other weirdness?
smapple t1_iyck5ku wrote
What gets me is how we have no way to spell these out yet they sound like words when we say them.