Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
Things that make you go ermmmm......
If science is based on fact & prove, how come it goes against the old english 'knowledge' of i before e.............
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Slooow_Jo. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
Well if you don't like the illogical spelling - lets change it
There's no such thing as right and wrong in spelling anyway. It's just what is sufficiently common to qualify for common usage.
Americans have lots of different spellings, not right or wrong it's just different.
Take the pronounciation of the letter H as Haitch - so often people look down their noses at that here but it's common usage in Ireland (known as the Hibernian [h]aitch)
We could start a movenet for logical English spelling - I doubt it'd catch on though any morre than Esperanto did. Language has a tendency to want to evolve naturally and in unexpected directions
There's no such thing as right and wrong in spelling anyway. It's just what is sufficiently common to qualify for common usage.
Americans have lots of different spellings, not right or wrong it's just different.
Take the pronounciation of the letter H as Haitch - so often people look down their noses at that here but it's common usage in Ireland (known as the Hibernian [h]aitch)
We could start a movenet for logical English spelling - I doubt it'd catch on though any morre than Esperanto did. Language has a tendency to want to evolve naturally and in unexpected directions
-- answer removed --
Personally I hate it when asked they are someone responds "I'm good"
But I dare say there were those who deplored the loss of Thee and Thou too. ( They probably set up a small resistance community in Yorkshire)
The only reason you hate that is because you were brought up to distinguish a difference between Learn and Teach.
It's possible that that distinction might fade away in the same way that "whom" is now becoming archaic.
But I dare say there were those who deplored the loss of Thee and Thou too. ( They probably set up a small resistance community in Yorkshire)
The only reason you hate that is because you were brought up to distinguish a difference between Learn and Teach.
It's possible that that distinction might fade away in the same way that "whom" is now becoming archaic.
One of the reasons why English is so easy to learn is that it is not encumbered with all those complications concerning the gender of nouns whereby adjectives and articles have to "agree" with the noun in gender and number and so on. Oddly, English seems to be the only language free of this unnecessary encumbrance, though there may be others that I don't know of.
I know that English is easy to learn because I know quite a lot of quite small children who speak it fluently...
I know that English is easy to learn because I know quite a lot of quite small children who speak it fluently...
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.