this post was submitted on 15 Jun 2024
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Clarification Edit: for people who speak English natively and are learning a second language

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[–] [email protected] 15 points 4 months ago (23 children)

I don't feel it's particularly broken honestly. Some languages are more consistent with their rules and therefore easier to learn but English is surprisingly consistent in practice/sound throughout the world. You also don't need to memorize the gender of a washing machine...

[–] [email protected] 6 points 4 months ago (13 children)

I don't feel it's particularly broken honestly.

There are five (5) ways of pronouncing oo, if you people haven't added a sixth one since the last time I looked.

Radii, fiancé, and façade are apparently perfectly cromulent English words that native English speakers who've never seen an ii, an é, or a ç are supposed to be able to pronounce correctly...

Your words for food animals come from completely different and unrelated languages depending on whether the animal is alive or dead (since the people who tended to the farms and the people who actually ate their meat spoke different languages)...

There are probably more irregular verbs than regular ones... (again, probably because of English really being three different languages in a trenchcoat)...

At some point in the sixteenth century you apparently just up and decided to randomly switch the pronunciation of all your vowels... without changing how you wrote them...

While most languages have developed some form of standard and regulative body, English seems like it'd rather leave the whole grammar, orthography, pronunciation, and whatnot situation as an exercise for the ~~victim~~ speaker, writer, or reader...

Yeah, no, not particularly broken at all... 😒

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago

I'm just pointing out the consistency in spoken form. Your criticisms are valid from a technical perspective, the best kind of correct...

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