i can already tell you that
diacritical distinctions
does exist in the english
language...
(olde english) albiet /
(modern english)
although
it's well hidden,
for starters
there is a good example
of an acute u (ú) popping it's
"ugly" head from the edenic
camoflouge:
e.g.? pút...
otherwise known
as the double omicron
in pool -
varied within púll...
oh **** me, invoking the germanic
ß (grapheme) was always going
to attract attention...
given anglo-saxons are cousins
with bavarians, swabians
or pomeranians -
if ever a prussian print would
exist,
we'd find that
they're the fourth
leg of a dog that queer
in linguistic
terms... the other three oddities?
finns, estonians
and the hun(garian)s...
i'm still at odds of discovering
all the particular diacritical
examples (distinctions) in english,
since no example of such
an instance being apparent,
unravels itself into a universally
consistent expression...
try applying diacritical marks
to each and every english word...
even j. joyce didn't mention
this "adventure" in his
undeservedly omitted work
finnegans wake...
but it is an adventure
nonetheless...
for there are instances in
english, when applying diacritical
marks is, frankly? all-too blatant:
your eyes start twitching,
your fingers start itching,
your tongue has a crap
dangling off it, implying: walk side-ways
for once, off the beaten track of
pop trend.
Jun 30, 2017
Jun 30, 2017 at 7:14 PM UTC
i can already tell you that
diacritical distinctions
does exist in the english
language...
(olde english) albiet /
(modern english)
although
it's well hidden,
for starters
there is a good example
of an acute u (ú) popping it's
"ugly" head from the edenic
camoflouge:
e.g.? pút...
otherwise known
as the double omicron
in pool -
varied within púll...
oh **** me, invoking the germanic
ß (grapheme) was always going
to attract attention...
given anglo-saxons are cousins
with bavarians, swabians
or pomeranians -
if ever a prussian print would
exist,
we'd find that
they're the fourth
leg of a dog that queer
in linguistic
terms... the other three oddities?
finns, estonians
and the hun(garian)s...
i'm still at odds of discovering
all the particular diacritical
examples (distinctions) in english,
since no example of such
an instance being apparent,
unravels itself into a universally
consistent expression...
try applying diacritical marks
to each and every english word...
even j. joyce didn't mention
this "adventure" in his
undeservedly omitted work
finnegans wake...
but it is an adventure
nonetheless...
for there are instances in
english, when applying diacritical
marks is, frankly? all-too blatant:
your eyes start twitching,
your fingers start itching,
your tongue has a crap
dangling off it, implying: walk side-ways
for once, off the beaten track of
pop trend.