GhostWriter16
Deity
Change nothing in English. I like knowing it the way it is

Make everyone accept "youse" as a standard second person plural pronoun.
I would campaign for "yall" and its plural, "all yall."
That's improper if there's only one person.
English DOES relate to its pronunciation... if you think of it as a remnant of how people spoke 700 years ago (or thereabouts).Abolish the insane system of tenses you have in English; make the use of articles consistent; do something to rationalize phrasal verbs and prepositions; and when I am at it, make the spelling of English relate to its pronunciation.
Why not just learn metric? It's not that difficult.Anywho - I would not mind giving those possessives up if everyone would concede and change back to our nonsensical systems of measurements so that I don't have to switch back and forth between tool sets when trying to get anything done.
It's marshmelon, according to Spock.- I would change the spelling of "marshmallow" to "marshmellow"
There's a Star Trek episode where Spock admits he may have made an error, and Dr. McCoy says, "Oh? This could be an historic occasion."If you don't say the h, then "an 'istoric" is what you should be saying
However, I come across people saying "an historic" quite frequently and the h is not silent. It just sounds so.. INCREDIBLY wrong..
Seems to be a British thing - I've never come across it here in North America.
YES!!! This plagued me for many years when I was typing for my clients (mostly college/university students), and had to straighten out essays and term papers for people who were confused about such things, or had trouble with academic formality.Introduce a gender-neutral pronoun.
No. That is so ugly...Make everyone accept "youse" as a standard second person plural pronoun.
So how many feet long and wide do you propose making a standard typing keyboard, then?I'd reform the alphabet to have a a one-symbol-per-sound correspondence.
How are they actually pronounced?I'd like to see people's suggestions for an English spelling reform. Will we invent tons of new vowel symbols? Will ð and þ make their return?
I would campaign for "yall" and its plural, "all yall."
I do.Nobody cares about that, though.
How are they actually pronounced?![]()
If you don't say the h, then "an 'istoric" is what you should be saying
However, I come across people saying "an historic" quite frequently and the h is not silent. It just sounds so.. INCREDIBLY wrong..
Seems to be a British thing - I've never come across it here in North America.
What does that even mean? Use IPA?make the spelling of English relate to its pronunciation.
Exactly.IPA is a veritable nightmare.
And it wouldn't standardize the spelling either. Since people pronounce words markedly differently from region to region.
ftfy
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Elaborate.
We often use no article at all in English. The non-use of the article is so important that we give it a name, the zero article (of course it has to be written with a definite article). The problems of choice can be summarized as follows:
- whether to use a/an or the
- whether to use a/an or nothing (zero)
- whether to use the or nothing (zero)
In addition we have to decide
- whether to use zero or some
- whether to use the or some
Because articles don't have gender or special plural forms in English (thank the gods), their use seems easy to learners at first (never seemed easy to me). However, choice is complicated by three factors:
- whether a noun is countable or uncountable (another thing in urgent need of rationalizing)
- whether we are making general statements (what the frak?)
- whether we are referring to something the listener or reader can positively identify or not (you've got to be kidding me!)
The rules concerning articles are so vague and irrational they make my head want to explode every time I read the chapter on articles in Longman:
I would change the following (in English):
- "an historic" - no.. no.. NO.. It's "A historic", you twit, unless the h is silent, which it almost never is.
For the first two, I have no idea what you're talking about.
What does that even mean? Use IPA?
The Slav over there wants genders or something, I guess. He's also one of those people who thinks that the Great Vowel Shift itself had an impact on orthography as opposed to inconsistent retention of spelling practices over centuries irrespective of the shift, so whatever.Articles? I'm baffled. There's only two. Three if you count "an" as well - but that's too trivial to be bothered about.
The Slav over there wants genders or something, I guess. He's also one of those people who thinks that the Great Vowel Shift itself had an impact on orthography as opposed to inconsistent retention of spelling practices over centuries irrespective of the shift, so whatever.
Anyway, articles are incredibly simple in English. The clue is in the name: the definite article is used if you're definitely sure what it is. And the indefinite article if you're not. Simplicity itself. (I jest, of course.)