Contour v Contor

Contour v Contor

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Jack Torrance

Overlook Hotel

Joined
04 Feb 11
Moves
47190
06 Mar 23

@suzianne said
Okay, Metal Brain.
I hope your right.

πŸ‘Œ

Joined
29 Nov 22
Moves
5624
06 Mar 23

@ponderable said
you meant broder?
πŸ˜„

IP

Joined
15 Jun 10
Moves
46374
06 Mar 23

He brought naught as he fought from a fort, no doubt about the root of the rout, or the route home.

I wrote a limerick about this kind of thing, which I'm trying to remember, bear with me....

If a womb is the place we begin it
And a tomb we put dead people in it
Then a comb would be coom
And a bomb would go boom
It's a funny old language though, innit.

Jack Torrance

Overlook Hotel

Joined
04 Feb 11
Moves
47190
06 Mar 23

@indonesia-phil said
He brought naught as he fought from a fort, no doubt about the root of the rout, or the route home.

I wrote a limerick about this kind of thing, which I'm trying to remember, bear with me....

If a womb is the place we begin it
And a tomb we put dead people in it
Then a comb would be coom
And a bomb would go boom
It's a funny old language though, innit.
Impressive Phil.

Joined
14 Mar 04
Moves
178482
06 Mar 23

Perhaps Americans are have less time to include the “u”, kinda like “a stitch in time”?πŸ€”

Yo! Its been

Me, all along

Joined
14 Jan 07
Moves
63721
06 Mar 23

In England, 1970's. The education system decided to start using hte 'Initial Teaching Alphabet' or ita. The idea was kids would spell words how they sounded and later they'd learn some words aren't spelled that way. The result is there is a generation who can't spell.
I suspect either early Americas couldn't be bothered to spell things the English way, or they purposefully tried to break away from the English and make something that separated them.
The English language is a mess anyway. Why doesn't break rhyme with freak?

Joined
14 Mar 04
Moves
178482
06 Mar 23

@yo-its-me said
In England, 1970's. The education system decided to start using hte 'Initial Teaching Alphabet' or ita. The idea was kids would spell words how they sounded and later they'd learn some words aren't spelled that way. The result is there is a generation who can't spell.
I suspect either early Americas couldn't be bothered to spell things the English way, or they purposefully ...[text shortened]... ing that separated them.
The English language is a mess anyway. Why doesn't break rhyme with freak?
It does rhyme with brake though.πŸ‘

Über-Nerd

Joined
31 May 12
Moves
8467
06 Mar 23

@yo-its-me said
In England, 1970's. The education system decided to start using hte 'Initial Teaching Alphabet' or ita. The idea was kids would spell words how they sounded and later they'd learn some words aren't spelled that way. The result is there is a generation who can't spell.
I suspect either early Americas couldn't be bothered to spell things the English way, or they purposefully ...[text shortened]... ing that separated them.
The English language is a mess anyway. Why doesn't break rhyme with freak?
Both British and American English variants are awful to spell. I suspect this is partly due to the French, Vikings, and Saxons having invaded Britain some time ago and deposited their genes and phonemes there.

chemist

Linkenheim

Joined
22 Apr 05
Moves
658287
06 Mar 23

@moonbus said
Both British and American English variants are awful to spell. I suspect this is partly due to the French, Vikings, and Saxons having invaded Britain some time ago and deposited their genes and phonemes there.
Yes lets go back to Piktish or something (maybe they have been invaders too at some time?)

Über-Nerd

Joined
31 May 12
Moves
8467
06 Mar 23

Please pronounce the word "ghoti."







I'll give you all a hint: it's pronounced 'fish.'



gh as in enough, o as in women, ti as in notion.

IP

Joined
15 Jun 10
Moves
46374
06 Mar 23

@yo-its-me said
In England, 1970's. The education system decided to start using hte 'Initial Teaching Alphabet' or ita. The idea was kids would spell words how they sounded and later they'd learn some words aren't spelled that way. The result is there is a generation who can't spell.
I suspect either early Americas couldn't be bothered to spell things the English way, or they purposefully ...[text shortened]... ing that separated them.
The English language is a mess anyway. Why doesn't break rhyme with freak?
He had eaten steak for breakfast....Phonetically he had eeten stake for brekfast, there's three versions of 'ea' before you've even really woken up.

Jack Torrance

Overlook Hotel

Joined
04 Feb 11
Moves
47190
06 Mar 23

@indonesia-phil said
He had eaten steak for breakfast....Phonetically he had eeten stake for brekfast, there's three versions of 'ea' before you've even really woken up.
If he has not really woken up he shouldn't be eating steak. Glad he is confused. πŸ˜† πŸ˜†

IP

Joined
15 Jun 10
Moves
46374
06 Mar 23

We have to employ a couple of staff as a part of the deal in order to live here, (we need them anyway!) we speak pigeon Indonesian, they speak pigeon English, so we've sort of started our own Englonesian language, which is about 50 - 50, wherein the subtleties of both languages are lost completely. I come on here so I can remember how to talk proper.

Misfit Queen

Isle of Misfit Toys

Joined
08 Aug 03
Moves
36841
07 Mar 23

@yo-its-me said
In England, 1970's. The education system decided to start using hte 'Initial Teaching Alphabet' or ita. The idea was kids would spell words how they sounded and later they'd learn some words aren't spelled that way. The result is there is a generation who can't spell.
I suspect either early Americas couldn't be bothered to spell things the English way, or they purposefully ...[text shortened]... ing that separated them.
The English language is a mess anyway. Why doesn't break rhyme with freak?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noah_Webster

We have Noah Webster to thank for a more sensible American grammar and spelling.

Über-Nerd

Joined
31 May 12
Moves
8467
11 Mar 23

Ring, rang, rung. Stink, stank, stunk, think, thank, thunk. πŸ˜†