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Forums => English & Linguistics => Topic started by: Porter on May 16, 2009, 06:57:31 AM

Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on May 16, 2009, 06:57:31 AM
and decided to make English better, how would I change it?

This is a thread to propose (and justify!) ways that you'd change how English is either spoken or written and discuss the consequences of the changes, pitfalls and improvements on them, and how the change is either brilliant :thecheat: or moronic :homestar: .

My first proposal is a specific rather than general rule: both its and it's should be spelled identically.  I really don't care which way, but we should pick one and stick with it.  We don't differentiate between them in spoken English, and it's not confusing there, so it shouldn't be any more confusing in written English.  The spelling differentiation only helps make things clearer in written English if you can remember a very specific rule, as opposed to there vs. they're, where you only need basic understanding of how English contractions are formed to know the exact meaning of the word.    
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: pooka on May 16, 2009, 07:03:30 AM
That is one I routinely screw up.  Does that fall under grammar, usage, spelling, or just puctuation?  Categories of practical English.  Hmm.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on May 16, 2009, 07:08:09 AM
Here are some general guidelines I also propose:

1. Current standard English is the baseline, and there should be positive benefit for any proposed change from there.

2. General rules are better than specific rules.   Anti-preference should be given to irregular rules.

3. While there is value in phonetic spellings, there is also some value in being able to see the etymology of a word in its non-phonetic spelling.  Also, despite it being culturally elitist thing to say, I claim that there is more value in being able to derive Greek or Romantic etymologies than other etymologies, as more educated English speakers are familiar with Greek, Romantic, and Latin words than German ones.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on May 16, 2009, 07:08:32 AM
Quote
That is one I routinely screw up.  Does that fall under grammar, usage, spelling, or just puctuation?
I'll bet it does!
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on May 16, 2009, 07:10:47 AM
Another proposal:  once a word becomes English, it's fully English.  That means that modifications to the word are done in the standard English fashion, and not in a way that reflects their language of origin.  That means, for example, that we'd use radiuses instead of radii and semispehre instead of hemisphere.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on May 16, 2009, 07:14:22 AM
Quote
semispehre instead of hemisphere
I'm confused. What does this one have to do with naturalizing borrowed words?
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Brinestone on May 16, 2009, 08:10:38 AM
I'd make C represent the "ch" sound, X represent the "sh" sound, and replace all current c's and x's with s, k, and "ks." I'd also reintroduce theta and eth for the "th" sounds.

Like this:

sirkle (circle)
foks (fox)
kold (cold)
xow (show)
ximmy (shimmy)
cild (child)
cokolate (chocolate)

Also, I'd get rid of all the h's in "wh" words.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: beverly on May 16, 2009, 08:21:48 AM
Quote
Quote
semispehre instead of hemisphere
I'm confused. What does this one have to do with naturalizing borrowed words?
Huh.  My understanding was that we use the words half of a sphere is a hemisphere and half of a circle is a semicircle because one of the words comes from Greek and the other comes from Latin, so one uses a Greek prefix and the other a Latin one.  But looking in the dictionary, they both seem to come from Latin.

edit:  Oops.  This is Porter.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on May 16, 2009, 08:24:49 AM
Quote
I'd make C represent the "ch" sound, X represent the "sh" sound, and replace all current c's and x's with s, k, and "ks." I'd also reintroduce theta and eth for the "th" sounds.
Woah!  No small changes for you!  
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on May 16, 2009, 08:35:21 AM
Quote
Huh.  My understanding was that we use the words half of a sphere is a hemisphere and half of a circle is a semicircle because one of the words comes from Greek and the other comes from Latin, so one uses a Greek prefix and the other a Latin one.  But looking in the dictionary, they both seem to come from Latin.
Hemi was borrowed from Greek to Latin to English. But I still don't understand the rationale for changing hemisphere to semisphere.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on May 16, 2009, 08:38:10 AM
Quote
I'd make C represent the "ch" sound, X represent the "sh" sound, and replace all current c's and x's with s, k, and "ks." I'd also reintroduce theta and eth for the "th" sounds.

Like this:

sirkle (circle)
foks (fox)
kold (cold)
xow (show)
ximmy (shimmy)
cild (child)
cokolate (chocolate)

Also, I'd get rid of all the h's in "wh" words.
You forgot to change qu to kw. ;)

So why theta rather than thorn?
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on May 16, 2009, 09:21:33 AM
Quote
Quote
Huh.  My understanding was that we use the words half of a sphere is a hemisphere and half of a circle is a semicircle because one of the words comes from Greek and the other comes from Latin, so one uses a Greek prefix and the other a Latin one.  But looking in the dictionary, they both seem to come from Latin.
Hemi was borrowed from Greek to Latin to English. But I still don't understand the rationale for changing hemisphere to semisphere.
OK, let's back up for a second.  Why do we use hemisphere instead of semisphere?
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on May 16, 2009, 09:36:45 AM
Because hemi and sphere are both Greek, whereas semi is Latin. Also, it appears that hemisphere was an actual Greek word and isn't something that was merely assembled from Greek roots.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: The Genuine on May 16, 2009, 10:46:46 AM
Quote
I'd make C represent the "ch" sound, X represent the "sh" sound, and replace all current c's and x's with s, k, and "ks." I'd also reintroduce theta and eth for the "th" sounds.

Like this:

sirkle (circle)
foks (fox)
kold (cold)
xow (show)
ximmy (shimmy)
cild (child)
cokolate (chocolate)

Also, I'd get rid of all the h's in "wh" words.
Why are you using the "y" in the "shimmy" example?  Why not just spell it "shimmee" ?

Or would you like to spell "deep" "dyp" ?
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Brinestone on May 16, 2009, 12:18:46 PM
Vowel spellings in English are such a mess that I almost think we'd have to leave some odd things alone. But I think it's quite possible to standardize consonant spellings.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Annie Subjunctive on May 16, 2009, 02:19:58 PM
I would replace the traditional Latin alphabet with an alternative, more phonetically accurate alphabet for the English language. This would offer immigrants an opportunity to learn to read and write English, which is often less phonetically consistent than many other languages.

Oh, wait. Not me, Brigham Young.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: rivka on May 16, 2009, 10:47:16 PM
:peek:  
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: pooka on May 17, 2009, 07:34:01 AM
Speaking of the Deseret Alphabet, at my son's school the other day in addition to the usual Alphabet letters on the wall they had 7 or 8 alternate sounds like th and sh and ch, and for some reason they included postvocallic R.  How common is it for people to really think of those as different sounds?  I mean, I'd put an alveolar tap up before I'd get all het up about postvocalic r.  

One of my ex-brother in laws actually said that we keep spellings such as ough in order to know who is bonafide.

"I am the pater familias!"
"But you're not bonafide."
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on May 17, 2009, 08:40:04 AM
Quote
Oh, wait. Not me, Brigham Young.
I get those two confused all the time.[/quote]
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on May 17, 2009, 08:45:57 AM
Quote
Because hemi and sphere are both Greek, whereas semi is Latin.
OK.  I was saying that the language of origin should have no bearing on how we modify words.  Semi is the standard prefix that we use for that purpose, and sphere shouldn't get a separate prefix because it comes from Greek.

Quote
Also, it appears that hemisphere was an actual Greek word and isn't something that was merely assembled from Greek roots.
Well, in that case, I guess this rule of mine doesn't apply to hemisphere.  

----

Concerning Ruth's proposed spelling changes -- I don't have a justification for why, but I don't like the idea of changing thing so much that somebody who is fluent in English today would have a problem reading it after the change.  
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Brinestone on May 17, 2009, 01:45:33 PM
My crazy idea for spelling reform would be to teach it as well as the old system for 25 years in schools. Year 1, you only teach it to kindergartners. Year 2, those first graders and then the new kindergartners. Year 3, likewise except now you have second graders too. By year 25, everyone who attended school will know both systems, and they'll probably think the more phonetic spelling system is the "easy" version. Year 26, you start putting both spellings on street signs, product packaging, etc., kind of like Canada does with French and English. Year 51, we use the new system for everything but still teach both spelling systems in schools to some extent so that kids can read "old" texts. And hopefully, after 50 years of watching their younger siblings, kids, and grandkids learn it, seeing it everywhere, and hearing about it, those over 50 will be able to adjust to the new system as well.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: The Genuine on May 17, 2009, 02:39:14 PM
I've never heard of this before.

http://www.deseretalphabet.com/index.html (http://www.deseretalphabet.com/index.html)

Who does this guy think he is?
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on May 21, 2009, 08:28:37 PM
Quote
I'd make C represent the "ch" sound, X represent the "sh" sound, and replace all current c's and x's with s, k, and "ks." I'd also reintroduce theta and eth for the "th" sounds.

Like this:

sirkle (circle)
foks (fox)
kold (cold)
xow (show)
ximmy (shimmy)
cild (child)
cokolate (chocolate)

Also, I'd get rid of all the h's in "wh" words.
I personally don't see any benefit to several of those changes, though they would be fine suggestions if you were coming up with an English orthography from scratch. In theory a 1:1 phoneme to grapheme correspondence sounds like a good thing, but I think languages like German show that it's not strictly necessary.

And at any rate, I'd worry about fixing English vowel spellings before I messed with the consonant spellings, which are already considerably more systematic in their use. The question is how to fix our vowels. It's tempting to try to align them with their original values, but that's a pretty major overhaul. I think a more realistic approach would be to start by smoothing out the inconsistencies in English spelling today. This is just off the top of my head; there might be better solutions to some or most of these.

/i/ = <ee>
/?/ = <i>
/e/ = <ey>
/?/ = <e>
/æ/ = <ae>
/?/ = <a>
/?/ = <o>
/o/ = <ow>
/?/ = <u>
/u/ = <ou>
/?/ = <uh>
/aw/ = <aw>
/aj/ = <ay>
/?j/ = <oy>

For the most part, all the tense vowels and diphthongs are spelled with two letters, while the lax monophthongs get only one. Silent e's would disappear. Sow thaet wuld giv uhs spelling thaet luks layk this. Ay down't think thaet's tou draestic uhf a cheyng, thow Ay'm olredee ruhnning intou prablems wher saylent e's indiceyt soft cansonaents. It's olsow hard tou ditermin thee uhnderlaying vawels bihaynd suhm vawels.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on May 21, 2009, 08:29:23 PM
Ugh. My proposed system looks ugly.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Tante Shvester on May 21, 2009, 08:56:41 PM
Not only that, it assumes that there is consistency and agreement among English speakers for those vowel sounds.  Which I have not found to be true.

As an example, I can distinguish between "marry", "merry", and "Mary", while you can not.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Brinestone on May 21, 2009, 08:58:31 PM
Which is why I stuck with consonants. Much less messy.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Tante Shvester on May 21, 2009, 09:04:29 PM
Why standardize spelling at all?  If we really want to be all egalitarian about it, stop making correct spelling the shibboleth of good breeding and education.  Blayne and Tom would be on equal footing.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on May 21, 2009, 09:06:10 PM
Quote
Not only that, it assumes that there is consistency and agreement among English speakers for those vowel sounds.
Not exactly. My spelling would be based on phonemics, not phonetics, so it doesn't need to account for every variant pronunciation. For example, this system would spell Mary, merry, and marry differently—as Meyree, merree, and maerree.

Of course, this spelling is based on a standard pronunciation, which is indeed not shared by all English speakers, but at least it's shared by a good number, as opposed to the five-hundred-years-out-of-date system that we use now.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on May 21, 2009, 09:07:27 PM
Quote
Why standardize spelling at all?
Because it makes reading easier. Of course, our system is bad enough that it makes learning to read harder, but once you've got it down you can read faster and more accurately than you can if you have to sound out every word.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Zalmoxis on May 26, 2009, 11:10:59 AM
I am not Brigham Young.

But I have stolen his experiments in social re-engineering to make cool LDS-themed t-shirts: http://motleyvision.spreadshirt.com/ (http://motleyvision.spreadshirt.com/)
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on May 26, 2009, 11:15:01 AM
I would add a new gender neutral pronoun to English (as opposed to it which is genderless).
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Annie Subjunctive on May 26, 2009, 05:08:36 PM
You mean for a third person singular neutral pronoun so people stop using they? I am right behind you on that one.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on May 26, 2009, 05:15:59 PM
People have been using they for all of recorded English history. Get with the times.  :P  
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: rivka on May 26, 2009, 08:08:07 PM
Quote
I would add a new gender neutral pronoun to English (as opposed to it which is genderless).
I vote for the Swahili "yeye".
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Annie Subjunctive on May 27, 2009, 07:12:22 AM
Quote
People have been using they for all of recorded English history. Get with the times.  :P
Not everyone. I recently looked this up in an APA style guide to see if I could get away with using the masculine pronoun, because I hate all the other options. Turns out I'm allowed to alternate between him and her, which made me very happy.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on May 27, 2009, 08:02:18 AM
Quote
Turns out I'm allowed to alternate between him and her, which made me very happy.
I actually hate that option.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Tante Shvester on May 27, 2009, 08:36:46 AM
Quote
Quote
Why standardize spelling at all?
Because it makes reading easier. Of course, our system is bad enough that it makes learning to read harder, but once you've got it down you can read faster and more accurately than you can if you have to sound out every word.
But it makes it so much easier to get amazing Scrabble scores.

"Yeah, there's a 'k' and an 'x' in that word.  They're silent, is all."
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on May 27, 2009, 09:14:43 AM
Quote
I recently looked this up in an APA style guide to see if I could get away with using the masculine pronoun, because I hate all the other options. Turns out I'm allowed to alternate between him and her, which made me very happy.
*shudders*
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: rivka on May 27, 2009, 11:08:38 AM
Me three.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Annie Subjunctive on May 27, 2009, 02:33:09 PM
What? It's the most logical answer to people who object to using the masculine pronoun on the grounds that it's sexist. And worlds better than him/her. And universes better than them.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on May 27, 2009, 02:36:24 PM
I hate him/her, but not as much as alternating between the two.

Using them is the least of our currently available evils.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: The Genuine on May 27, 2009, 11:16:42 PM
It?
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on May 27, 2009, 11:21:56 PM
Calling somebody an it means you are saying that they are neither male nor female.  I want a pronoun that means you aren't saying anything about their gender.

Just like I used the pronouns they and their in the previous paragraph.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: The Genuine on May 27, 2009, 11:28:01 PM
Do you call a random animal an "it" when you don't know its gender (even though it has one)?
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on May 27, 2009, 11:35:31 PM
I might, but that's because I don't mind "dehumanizing" a critter.  

It's insulting to call a person an it.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Tante Shvester on May 27, 2009, 11:39:53 PM
As in "Jesse doesn't know its butt from its elbow"?
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: The Genuine on May 28, 2009, 12:17:14 AM
I was always told I shouldn't stick something the size of my elbow in my …

Oh, nevermind.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Neutros the Radioactive Dragon on May 28, 2009, 08:15:13 AM
:lol:
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Annie Subjunctive on May 28, 2009, 05:18:02 PM
Quote
I am not Brigham Young.

But I have stolen his experiments in social re-engineering to make cool LDS-themed t-shirts: http://motleyvision.spreadshirt.com/ (http://motleyvision.spreadshirt.com/)
One of which I am wearing right now  :cool:  
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on November 16, 2009, 02:20:46 PM
Were I kind of the world, I would eliminate the distinction between immigrate and emigrate. It's almost always entirely superfluous, and furthermore it's often difficult to determine which one to use.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: The Genuine on November 16, 2009, 02:29:42 PM
I would just rather get rid of from and to.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on November 16, 2009, 02:30:47 PM
Quote
Were I kind of the world, I would eliminate the distinction between immigrate and emigrate. It's almost always entirely superfluous, and furthermore it's often difficult to determine which one to use.
I'd support that.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on November 16, 2009, 02:47:31 PM
Quote
I would just rather get rid of from and to.
Not me, because those are actually meaningful. It's when someone is both coming from somewhere and going to somewhere that it seems somewhat useless to pick one or the other.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: rivka on November 16, 2009, 03:00:11 PM
Quote
Were I kind of the world, I would eliminate the distinction between immigrate and emigrate. It's almost always entirely superfluous, and furthermore it's often difficult to determine which one to use.
Having just had a conversation where the distinction was far from moot, I'm just glad you're not my liege. ;)
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Annie Subjunctive on November 16, 2009, 03:09:55 PM
Why don't we ever just migrate anymore?
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: rivka on November 16, 2009, 03:27:22 PM
Because I hate yurts.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Annie Subjunctive on November 16, 2009, 03:53:07 PM
My favorite part of Mexico's customs form was when it asked me to please "sing in the box of the migrant."
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: rivka on November 16, 2009, 04:25:34 PM
:lol:

You stood there and sang, didn't you?
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on November 16, 2009, 05:10:14 PM
Quote
Having just had a conversation where the distinction was far from moot, I'm just glad you're not my liege. ;)
What was the conversation?
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: rivka on November 16, 2009, 05:28:03 PM
It was long and complicated. Suffice it to say that it was useful to say "Did all your relatives emigrate?" and mean "Are there any left in Poland?" rather than "Did they all move to the US?" (Especially since I think some are in Israel.)
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on November 16, 2009, 06:17:50 PM
Hmm. I suppose I could grant that the distinction is occasionally useful. But I think that for the most part, it's superfluous. It's too bad migrant and migration have slightly different connotations rather than just being direction-neutral equivalents.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: rivka on November 16, 2009, 06:43:46 PM
Quote
Hmm. I suppose I could grant that there the distinction is occasionally useful.
*happy*
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: sarcasticmuppet on November 16, 2009, 08:24:44 PM
Truly, he is a kind and benevolent king.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Porter on November 16, 2009, 08:50:00 PM
*points at SM's sig*
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: saxon75 on November 17, 2009, 10:31:32 AM
Every time I see this thread I think to myself something like, "If I were king of the world, I'd get a PlayStation 3," or "If I were king of the world, I'd have nicer furniture."  Or sometimes, "If I were king of the world I think I'd abdicate."
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on November 17, 2009, 10:39:36 AM
Minister of Sandwiches is a lofty enough title for you?
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: rivka on November 17, 2009, 10:57:45 AM
Quote
Were I kind of the world
I just caught this. It made me smile.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Tante Shvester on November 17, 2009, 11:13:29 AM
Quote
Every time I see this thread I think to myself something like, "If I were king of the world, I'd get a PlayStation 3," or "If I were king of the world, I'd have nicer furniture."  Or sometimes, "If I were king of the world I think I'd abdicate."
And I hear Jeremiah was a bullfrog . . .
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Jonathon on November 17, 2009, 12:04:57 PM
Quote
Quote
Were I kind of the world
I just caught this. It made me smile.
*sigh*
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: saxon75 on November 17, 2009, 12:16:57 PM
Quote
Minister of Sandwiches is a lofty enough title for you?
Apparently so.
Title: If I were king of the world,
Post by: Tante Shvester on November 17, 2009, 12:40:22 PM
We can team up and be a lunch special: Soup and Sandwich.