From: Lady Date: Sat, 30 Sep 2023 17:31:21 +0000 (-0400) Subject: start a page for orthography ideas X-Git-Url: https://git.ladys.computer/Wiki/commitdiff_plain/63cb6f9f5f4814b67fb7550c3eef8182eae1118d?ds=inline;hp=7b6d896d48cfba1bc5c49f47113ca568361d7077 start a page for orthography ideas with middot as first entry --- diff --git a/Sources/Page/EnglishOrthography.djot b/Sources/Page/EnglishOrthography.djot new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2ce2bb6 --- /dev/null +++ b/Sources/Page/EnglishOrthography.djot @@ -0,0 +1,30 @@ +# ideas for improving English orthography + +This page lists various ideas editors of this wiki have had regarding + English orthography and various improvements or changes which might + be made there·with. + +## middle dot (middot) + +::: thread + +- I use the middle dot as a “phonological hyphen”—to indicate when + parts of words should be pronounced as if they are distinct + phonological items. + In this sense it takes the place of a dieresis (‹ co·operate › not + not ‹ coöperate ›) and clarifies silent E in compound words + (‹ code·point ›). + It can also be added when not strictly phonologically necessary just + to make very long words easier to scan. + + As an exception, I usually don’t use the middle dot with common, + known suffixes like _‐ly_{as=i} (as in ‹ lately ›) to reduce + visual noise. + [][@:Lady]{.sig} + +- As a (somewhat) distinct usage, I use the middle dot to separate + letters which should be spoken separately (acronyms) as this + avoids the end‐of‐sentence confusion that one gets with periods. + [][@:Lady]{.sig} + +:::