Date: 2025-10-05 12:23 pm (UTC)
jsburbidge: (Default)
From: [personal profile] jsburbidge

Reverse the Great Vowel Shift (for English)? I mean, it puts us out of step with everyone in Europe...

Edited Date: 2025-10-05 12:23 pm (UTC)

Date: 2025-10-05 03:49 pm (UTC)
ioplokon: purple cloth (Default)
From: [personal profile] ioplokon
Spelling reforms are tricky. Even the French haven't been able to get the ones from the 90s to fully stick (tho IMO most of the good ones, like the feminine professional titles & more sensible numbers have; it is mainly stuff like ognon for oignon that gets refused).

Date: 2025-10-06 09:35 pm (UTC)
jsburbidge: (Default)
From: [personal profile] jsburbidge

But the circumflex makes it relatively straightforward to adjust to reading Rabelais and any prior writers, because ut allows one to expect the old spellings of the words.

This actually made a difference to me when I was dropped into a Lycée in Seconde and started out the year reading Rabelais and Montaigne, as it simplified my adjustment to Early Modern / Late Middle French.

Date: 2025-10-07 01:36 am (UTC)
ioplokon: purple cloth (Default)
From: [personal profile] ioplokon
Haha, as an anglo, I actually quite like that one. But I do think it is largely optional in the reformed spelling (except to disambiguate homonyms). The ones I hate are how like, amour is masculine in the singular and feminine in the plural. And the rules for which colors take agreement with the noun & which don't.

BUT they only stopped saying their equivalent of "lady policeman" like 10 years ago so...

Date: 2025-10-07 03:13 pm (UTC)
ioplokon: purple cloth (Default)
From: [personal profile] ioplokon
It is mostly annoying, but can be fun. For example, I think it's an interesting challenge to use epicene constructions when writing about people in general. Though I also will just employ the feminine default to be contrarian. :p

Date: 2025-10-08 04:58 pm (UTC)
ioplokon: purple cloth (Default)
From: [personal profile] ioplokon
No, it is crucial everyone know that a table is a girl!

But, idk. I have an ambiguous name (and appearance T-T) and, in my experience, it has been much easier and less awkward to communicate how people should refer to me in French than in English. English had solved this with the whole idea of putting your pronouns in your email signature, but now the worst people ever will just say the opposite of what you put.

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