Nonfiction
Book
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Details
PUBLISHED
©2025
EDITION
DESCRIPTION
xv, 287 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN/ISSN
LANGUAGE
NOTES
Washington, D.C., 2010. A man of letters ; English: a simplified history ; The faýer, sun, and hili ghoost ; O spare, we beseech you, our mother-tongue! ; A nue merrykin dikshunary -- Illinois, 1859. The phunny phellows ; The deseret alphabet ; The charge of suffragist shorthanders ; Frědum speling ; The sentenial ekspozishun -- Washington, D.C., 1906. Ruzevelt speling ; Ye olde or the nu? ; Our drunken alphabet ; Hi soesiety -- Washington, D.C., 1962. Mad men ; Cn u rd ths? ; Shaw(t)hand ; Kool kidz ; Eezy reeding ; Nothing compares 2 u ; Txtspk -- An (abbreviated) dictionary of simplified spelling ; Muzik and liriks
"A brief and humorous 500-year history of the Simplified Spelling Movement from advocates like Ben Franklin, C. S. Lewis, and Mark Twain to texts and Twitter"--
Why does the G in George sound different from the G in gorge? Why does C begin both case and cease? And why is it funny when a philologist faints, but not polight to laf about it? Anyone who has ever had the misfortune to write in English has, at one time or another, struggled with its spelling. So why do we continue to use it? If our system of writing words is so tragically inconsistent, why haven't we standardized it, phoneticized it, brought it into line? How many brave linguists have ever had the courage to state, in a declaration of phonetic revolt: "Enough is enuf"? The answer: many. In the comic annals of linguistic history, legions of rebel wordsmiths have died on the hill of spelling reform, risking their reputations to bring English into the realm of the rational. This book is about them: Mark Twain, Ben Franklin, Eliza Burnz, C. S. Lewis, George Bernard Shaw, Charles Darwin, and the innumerable others on both sides of the Atlantic who, for a time in their life, became fanatically occupied with writing thru instead of through, tho for though, laf for laugh, beleev for believe, and dawter for daughter (and tried futilely to get everyone around them to do it too). Henry takes his humorous and informative chronicle right up to today as the language seems to naturally be simplifying to fit the needs of our changing world thanks to technology--from texting to Twitter and emojis, the Simplified Spelling Movement may finally be having its day