Talk:English alphabet/Archive 1
This is an archive of past discussions about English alphabet. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 |
Letter frequency
This really should be arranged in descending order, starting from E and ending with Z. SKC 22:42, 9 August 2007 (UTC)
Pronunciation
Hey! Who put the "Haitch" into the alphabet in that audio clip? If I had said that in school I would have been sent home!
I agree with the guy above. The pronunciation of the letter H is not a matter of dialect or accent; 'H' is correct and 'haitch' is not. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 217.20.20.85 (talk) 15:27, 19 May 2011 (UTC)
Since someone has kindly added IPA pronunciation, the SAMPA is redundant and clutters the chart. Is there any reason not to delete it? —Michael Z. 07:12, 2004 Dec 20 (UTC)
- The best thing to do when there are mistakes is to fix the mistakes, rather than obliterating the entire page. --Evice 21:02, Dec 24, 2004 (UTC)
- What I mean is: is the IPA alone sufficient to convey pronunciation? If so, can I delete the SAMPA to make the page less cluttered? —Michael Z. 21:54, 2004 Dec 24 (UTC)
- Well, that took five hours to get reverted, and in the middle of the night. I don't know why I post questions like these on the talk pages; someone who disagrees only comes by after the change is made. Oh, well. —Michael Z. 21:05, 2004 Dec 27 (UTC)
Curious
Curious, under what circumstance is "W" used as a vowel?
That sentence points to semivowel, which explains it a bit.
- W is a vowel in Welsh, pronounced "oo", and therefore in a few Welsh words that have become (moreor less) naturalised in English, such as cwm, crwth. rossb 19:31, 25 Feb 2005 (UTC)
- In the word kwm (pronounced "koom").Cameron Nedland 23:58, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
I've made this argument 3 times now. W is a vowel under all circumstances: look at this. I wrote this on the W letter page, and now I'm putting it here.
(I agree-- Y is also a vowel everytime-- (Eeellow to Yellow)) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.212.21.93 (talk) 18:57, 16 June 2010 (UTC)
W is a vowel every time. I know this from learning Greek, which does not have a W character. However, it creates W's with the ou sound, just as I realized English does.
Take a word that ends in W: tow. When you say this word, what you're really saying is to - ou. These aren't seperate syllables; they're two vowels merged together.
Now take a word that begins in W: Work. When you say Work, you're really saying Ou - ork. Say that really fast, and you'll realize that they are the exact same thing.
Also, your vocal cords do not close at any time while pronouncing the letter w in any situation.
See what I mean?
Also, the only reason that we do not use w as a standalone vowel is English convention. Don't ask me, we just don't. -Panther (talk) 01:22, 23 June 2009 (UTC)
- Here's what Webster had to say about it around 1800:
W is a vowel; its sound being nearly the same as oo short, in root. Before another vowel it is used to form a diphtong; as in will, dwell, which are pronounced ooill, dooell. Some authors content [sic] that it is a consonant; but according to the foregoing definitions, it is rather a vowel.
- But he adds a note:
I am not strenuous in this opinion; it approaches so near a consonant that it can hardly be distinguished from one.
- We construe "w" as a consonant, and perhaps that has contributed to its present pronunciation, which is not that of a vowel or diphthong. You tell us to "say that really fast"; if we do, we have a different sound. The "oo" or "ou" part is unvoiced. I call that a consonant, but it matters little, really. --Milkbreath (talk) 15:28, 3 September 2009 (UTC)
- Here's what Webster had to say about it around 1800:
- How we who look at and analyze language "construe" it has little or no effect on the living, complex, phenomenon of spoken language. The English phonemes /w/ and /y/ are semivowels. (Following linguistic convention, I enclose WRITTEN material in <> and phonological material in //.) The Roman letters <w> and <y> are used in a number of ways in English, including
- <w>
- consonantal: way, with
- silent: write, wrong
- as the second part of a digram denoting a vowel sound that may have been historically related to the sound /w/ or /u/, whether or not the letter <w> still carries a relic of that value in the digram, usually as the offglide /ʊ/: law (no /w/), hew (/u:/ in /hju:/), how (/w/ in /haʊ/), throw (in /oʊ/)
- <y>
- consonantal: you, yes, yolk
- as the second part of a digram denoting a vowel sound that may have been historically related to the sound /y/ or /i/, usually or always still reflecting a high or high-mid front offglide: buy, bay, boy.
- <w>
- I'm sure the Germans would be surprised to hear that the letter <w> is always a vowel. They pronounce it /v/.
- --Thnidu (talk) 04:42, 15 September 2011 (UTC)
- How we who look at and analyze language "construe" it has little or no effect on the living, complex, phenomenon of spoken language. The English phonemes /w/ and /y/ are semivowels. (Following linguistic convention, I enclose WRITTEN material in <> and phonological material in //.) The Roman letters <w> and <y> are used in a number of ways in English, including
Sections
I thought splitting "notes" up into 2 sections made the article much easier to read. Why was it reverted?66.99.9.30 18:54, 31 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Yogh
I am aware that yogh didn't just stand for /g/. I am talking about the grapheme. They didn't just make up the symbol, it is based on the shape of the latin letter g as written by Irish and Anglo-Saxon scribes, see e.g. [1]. dab (ᛏ) 13:34, 16 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- That's one theory. However, Yogh was used for completely different sounds than G. It is just plain wrong to state that Yogh derived from G. Jordi·✆ 13:44, 16 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- I'm sorry. There seems to be a misunderstanding. Do you agree we are talking about graphemes, not phonemes? Of course a Yogh is different from G, just as Eth is different from D. W is not "also" for UU, because when it was a ligature, there was no distinction between UU and VV (U was introduced in the 16th century, i.e. in Early Modern English). Now, what other theories for the origin of the grapheme Yogh are there? I thought it was very obvious it is a variant of g, but I'm willing to be educated, of course. dab (ᛏ) 14:24, 16 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- The letter yogh is derived from Insular g, but it is not identical to Insular g. It is not derived from Carolingian g. I have fixed the text. Please see http://www.evertype.com/standards/wynnyogh/ezhyogh.html Evertype 14:27, 2005 Mar 16 (UTC)
- I'm sorry. There seems to be a misunderstanding. Do you agree we are talking about graphemes, not phonemes? Of course a Yogh is different from G, just as Eth is different from D. W is not "also" for UU, because when it was a ligature, there was no distinction between UU and VV (U was introduced in the 16th century, i.e. in Early Modern English). Now, what other theories for the origin of the grapheme Yogh are there? I thought it was very obvious it is a variant of g, but I'm willing to be educated, of course. dab (ᛏ) 14:24, 16 Mar 2005 (UTC)
sigh, I am not sure what is so contentious about all this, but somehow yogh and wynn are mixed up in the present version (I mean the glyphs. or is it just my browser??). if you agree that they are, could somebody fix that please? dab (ᛏ) 14:08, 21 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- The characters were swapped in the introduction. For reference, wynn looks like a p, and yogh looks like a 3. Jordi·✆ 14:21, 21 Mar 2005 (UTC)
spellings
I added the modern names of the letters per the OED: letter + ee, or e + letter, for the consonants, and the vowels for themselves, with the exceptions of aitch, jay, kay, cue, ar, ess, double-u, wye, zed. Variants occur, such as obsolete cu, qu, que, kue, kewe for Q, and in verbal forms, such as effing. --kwami 03:08, 26 Apr 2005 (UTC)
- This is a stupid idea. The IPA pronunciations are enough, without adding imprecise pronunciations. Could someone remove these inaccurate pronunciations of the letters, leaving just the correct IPA pronunciations. -- Mark 11:52, 10 May 2005 (UTC)
- They aren't "pronunciations", they're the standard spellings of the names of the letters! You wouldn't remove the names alpha, beta etc. from the Greek alphabet because "the IPA pronunciations" [alfa, vita] "are enough", would you? And where else are you going to go to find out how to spell the name of the letter Y, or H? These are all from the OED, but it took me a while to find Y listed under the letter W! kwami 21:53, 2005 May 10 (UTC)
Pronunciation
Phonemic pronunciation /.../ is pretty well accepted for most purposes in Wikipedia, unless there's a specific reason to be more specific. The IPA representations here can be shown with slashes as they are, but in a few cases I might even simplify them. E.g., /keɪ/ would be acceptable for [kʰeɪ], and /el/ for [ɛɫ].
If you're going to use brackets [...] to indicate precise phonetic pronunciation of the letter names, then you should indicate what accent these represent. You may as well also start adding versions for different accents, like for Alabama, New York, Vancouver, London, Glasgow, Dublin, Delhi, etc. —Michael Z. 2005-05-15 20:33 Z
- I changed them to brackets because a phonetic pronunciation was being indicated. Phonemic would be fine, but slashes with phonetic pronunciation is not. That is, if we change to slashes, we need to phonemicize the transcription: if other pages are sloppy in this regard, then they need to be fixed, rather than us being sloppy too. We should simplify more than you suggest, however. For instance, K would be /keː/ (if L were /el/), or /ke/ (if L were /ɛl/). [That's a theoretical stance, whether the difference between these vowels is phonemically one of length, or if they're different vowels like /i/ and /a/.] We shouldn't show a diphthong, because the vowel isn't phonemically a diphthong. Likewise, O would be /oː/ or /o/. H would be /eːc/ or /ec/: Since the ch sound is a single phoneme, it should be transcribed with a single letter. Anything in the IPA that's reasonably close, like /c/, would be appropriate.
- However, the point of this table is to tell people how to pronounce the letters, not to make a theoretical point as to which sounds are phonemically contrastive in English. Since pronunciation guides are by their nature phonetic, a phonetic transcription would seem appropriate. Of course, we can change the level of phonetic detail: lose the aspiration marks, lose the diphthongs, lose the velarized el, etc. That's not a theoretical issue, just a judgement call of how much detail is appropriate. But this approach would require brackets. kwami 23:44, 2005 May 15 (UTC)
- I'm a little confused. Bear with me, because I learned IPA on-line and am not very clear on the finer differences between some of the symbols. But I don't see how /ec/ sounds at all like the name of the letter H; wouldn't that sound more like the "ets" in "nets" (or perhaps like a Slavic "еть" /etʲ/)? /eɪʧ/, or maybe /ejʧ/ look right to me (I replaced the two-letter tsh sound with a ligature). And /ke:/ wouldn't get the name across to me either; it's "the letter kay". I suppose a Scot might say the letter name that way, but then if he read "/kej/", it may sound like that to me too.
- Personally, I think it's good to keep it very simple because
- It's easier to read if one is not very familiar with IPA. Our audience isn't linguists, it's the general reader.
- We're not trying to duplicate the precise phonetic pronunciation in a particular dialect; we're just showing the names of the letters.
- /el/ seems just as good to me as /ɛɫ/ at getting the name of the letter L across. When I pronounce /kju:/, I will probably automatically add the (superscript-h) aspiration, but for all I know, there are English accents that wouldn't—and I don't think it matters. —Michael Z. 2005-05-16 02:11 Z
- Personally, I think it's good to keep it very simple because
On p. 791 of World's Writing Systems, the first four letters of the alphabet are referred to as [eːj], [biːj], [siːj], [diːj]. Unfortunately, I can't find the rest of the letters in that book, but it's as authoritative a reference as there is, I think. —Michael Z. 2005-05-16 03:10 Z
- Hi, Michael. As for the /ec/ notation, I was trying to make a point about phonemic spellings being a bit too abstract for a pronunciation guide, in my opinion. (IPA [c] (in brackets) is a palatal stop, and in most languages that have it, it's pretty close to English ch.)
- World's Writing Systems is a great book for all the stuff in it, but the quality is uneven. (I mean, the chapter on Japanese is terrible.) On p. 791, O'Conner simply got it wrong. I'd check out Ladefoged's intro college text A Course in Phonetics for English and a general intro to phonetics. It's outrageously priced, but it's ubiquitous and goes through so many new editions (with little point other than making more money) that it should be easy to pick up a used copy somewhere. (Another book of his, The Sounds of the World's Languages, covers a lot more territory and at a lower price, and is a great book, but doesn't have much room for English.)
- There are three common approaches to representing English "long" and "short" vowels. (I'll use [i], as in sit and seat, for an example, cuz there's a lot of dialectical variation with the low and back vowels.)
- The difference, essentially, is phonemically length, and the rest is phonetic detail, so they can be best transcribed as [i] and [iː].
- The difference is essentially quality (vowel height for some, "tense/lax" for others, etc.), and the length is detail, so they can be best transcribed [ɪ] and [i]. Or these two could be combined, for [ɪ]/[iː].
- The "long" vowels are really diphthongs: [ɪ] and [ij], or maybe [ɪ] and [ɪj].
- You wouldn't have a vowel that's both long and a diphthong, like O'Conner. Everyone agrees there's a single feature here, even if they can't agree on what it is.
- Regardless of which system you choose, a native speaker will get it right. But we're not just aiming for the native speaker, which is why I think the little details like aspiration on Q might be worth keeping. If you actually said [kju:], a native speaker would hear gew. This actually happened to me: I lost my aspiration while living abroad, and when I got back, my own mother couldn't understand me. When I said take, she heard day!
- Now, there are underlying theoretical assumptions behind the three systems, but much of the disagreement may be due to the dialect of the person making the argument. For me, the "long" vowels are clearly diphthongs (I can most easily hear it in pairs like pill vs. peel, with peel almost being a syllable and a half, but I can feel my tongue move in a word like sea too). But my phonetics prof, who was from the opposite side of the country, insisted that the difference was length. However, according to Ladefoged (as good an authority as you're gonna get), for most of the US, the long vowels are phonetically diphthongs. This is very likely not true for the UK, or at least not for all of it.
- BTW, for the mid vowels (set, sate), these approaches would give you [e]/[eː]; [ɛ]/[e]; and either [e]/[ej] or [ɛ]/[ɛɪ̯] or [ɛ]/[eɪ̯], etc. So the person who wrote the article decided that length was the critical feature for the high vowels, and for mid vowels it was the diphthong. That's pretty common, as the diphthong's easier to hear in the mid vowels.
- So, IMHO, I think we should stick to a phonetic representation. Personally, I'd include a lot of phonetic detail like aspiration and the velarized el, for the non-native speaker, even if it's redundant for you and me. I'd also make all the vowels diphthongs ([ej, bij, sij, dij, ij, ɛf], etc.), because that's what I hear, but I'd expect someone who doesn't have that feature (or maybe who can't hear it) to object. There is no one correct answer, and it doesn't really matter a whole lot, except that someone kept putting the phonetic transcriptions between /slashes/, which was making a theoretical claim that was just wrong. kwami 07:06, 2005 May 16 (UTC)
- Thanks for the patient explanation. Since all those experts can't agree on an authoritative representation, I'll feel a little more confident about my own attempts at formulating pronunciation in IPA. I think it would be useful to put some of this into the article on IPA, to show that the system isn't absolute but subject to interpretation.
- I'm Western Canadian, so I think there may be a touch less diphthong in some of my vowels, but I see what you mean. When I say the name of the letter "C", there's a very subtle /j/ on the end, or maybe it's a sort of stop or release. But in some phrases the word "see" sounds like /si:/ or even /si/. I definitely perceive a difference in quality, not just length, between short and long vowels.
- I can see some of the benefits of using phonetic transcription here, but I'm still not sure that that's the right way to go. The best approach seems to depend on the audience. Your pronunciation of the word "take" changed over time, but neither version was wrong. Couldn't the way you said it in both periods be phonemically transcribed as /teɪk/? In this context, shouldn't we try to show how the basic word is said, without relating minor features of regional accent?
- I'll look for those books. There doesn't seem to be a copy of WWS in any library in my city, including two universities. I've been relying on Amazon.com's "search inside the book" to do a little reference. Looks like there are several Ladefoged books in the local University library. Cheers. —Michael Z. 2005-05-16 16:11 Z
By the way, your input would be useful at Talk:International Phonetic Alphabet for English#Pronunciation guides in Wikipedia articles. —Michael Z. 2005-05-16 16:17 Z
- Oh, my pronunciation of take was definitely wrong — when your friends and family can't understand you, there's st that's not right! And yes, the diphthong in [ij] is quite subtle, which is why many people don't transcribe it. Also, I think all major English dialects have a qualitative difference in long & short vowels (at least, if they have long & short vowels); the question is not whether it exists, but whether it's important enough to transcribe — like aspiration, it's a judgement call: Is it relevant & informative, or just clutter?
- And when I lost my aspiration, I also lost the diphthong. So it was more like /tek/. If you're gonna make the transcription phonemic, you'll need to decide whether the diphthong is essential or not. My impression is that it's mere phonetic detail, and shouldn't be there. If you buy that, then you need to decide if the relevant factor is quantity or quality. I have absolutely no idea (again, it's a model of a theoretical claim, not reality!), but we shouldn't have both. kwami 21:22, 2005 May 16 (UTC)
- There is something that for lack of a better term we might call "dictionary standard IPA for English", being defined as generally the type of IPA transcription used in dictionaries, whether in the actual entries—as in most modern British dictionaries, like the Oxford and Cambridge dictionaries—or in the front matter which correlates the dictionary-specific phonetic symbols to the IPA—as in most modern American dictionaries, like the Merriam-Webster and the American Heritage. These dictionaries generally give the set of English phonemic monophthongs as something resembling this: [i ɪ eɪ ɛ æ ɑ ɒ ɔ ʌ oʊ ʊ u ɜ], with a few variations. The variations are:
- including the length marker for the "long" vowels for British English
- changing oʊ to əʊ for British English
- merging ɑ and ɒ in American English
- I didn't include the rhotics, the diphthongs or the reduced vowels, but the same principles apply. International Phonetic Alphabet for English explicates most of the symbols.
- Even though the actual pronunciation of English varies (sometimes dramatically) from this standard, and even though this standard may even have some theoretical problems particularly with the representation of vowels, we should stick to it as much as possible because it's a common reference point. If we use a different set of phonemes for transcribing English on every page, we end up confusing readers who try to figure what the symbols mean and not finding the symbols they encounter on the reference pages. Some variation will of course be inevitable, as even the dictionary makers don't agree on the symbols, but generally sticking to the beaten paths is what we should do here. Wikipedia:No original research. Nohat 22:21, 18 May 2005 (UTC)
- There is something that for lack of a better term we might call "dictionary standard IPA for English", being defined as generally the type of IPA transcription used in dictionaries, whether in the actual entries—as in most modern British dictionaries, like the Oxford and Cambridge dictionaries—or in the front matter which correlates the dictionary-specific phonetic symbols to the IPA—as in most modern American dictionaries, like the Merriam-Webster and the American Heritage. These dictionaries generally give the set of English phonemic monophthongs as something resembling this: [i ɪ eɪ ɛ æ ɑ ɒ ɔ ʌ oʊ ʊ u ɜ], with a few variations. The variations are:
Phonemic transcription
We're getting into a bit of an edit war here. An anonymous user keeps reverting to phonemic slash notation, but mixed up with a phonetic transcription. I'll change it to a phonemic transcription to see it that's more satisfactory. Of course, this won't tell a non-native speaker how to pronounce the letters, but at least it won't be so misleading.
Of course, this requires a theoretical basis, as to whether the difference of the vowels in set and sate is essentially one of height, length, tense/lax, or monophthong/diphthong. I'm going to go with height. kwami 00:11, 2005 May 18 (UTC)
- I'm reverting to my last serious edit. If anyone else wants to contribute, great. You might want to make a comment here so that your contribution doesn't get lost in the reverts: I'm going to automatically revert any edits by our anonymous editor (who by the way has received multiple requests to stop vandalizing pages). Unless he wants to join in the discussion, of course. kwami 20:38, 2005 May 18 (UTC)
- Wikipedia:Manual of Style (pronunciation), which is based on the official Handbook of the International Phonetic Association, says that phoneme slashes should only be used if the distinction between phones and phonemes is significant in the use at hand. Here, the distinction is not important, so, following policy, the correct solution is to enclose minimal symbols (that represent phonemes) in square brackets. Nohat 21:57, 18 May 2005 (UTC)
- It's not policy. And it's counter to the overwhelming usage on Wikipedia. It's an edit someone made, and I subsequently disputed, but hasn't been resolved yet. Operating on the theory that most Wikipedia readers aren't familiar with the Handbook of the International Phonetic Association, I'm recommending consistently using slashes for phonemic transcriptions. How would one know whether "the distinction between phones and phonemes is significant in the use at hand"? —Michael Z. 2005-05-19 02:34 Z
- As in, when the article is distinguishing between phones and phonemes, and it's important to indicate the distinction, like when, for example, explaning the various rules for the realization of phonemes. For example, in English, you would say /k/ -> [kʰ] before stressed vowels; /l/ -> [ɫ] in syllable codas, etc. In almost every other case, the distinction is not important, and square brackets should be used. Phonemic analyses are not always universally agreed upon, and the most neutral description would be square brackets, which merely say "this contains phonetic information, which may or may not be minimally phonemic, but we take no stand as to whether it is phonemic", whereas slashes come with the implied assumption that everything within the slash is necessarily a phoneme and the implied assumption that the phonemes indicated are in fact separate phonemes of the language, which may or may not be disputed. It's better to just stick with the punctuation that makes the fewest number of assumptions about what it's punctuating. Not only does this policy adhere to the policy for official IPA usage, but it also adheres more easily to the Wikipedia policy of the Neutral Point of View. Nohat 03:07, 19 May 2005 (UTC)
7
is there a unicode character for the 'and' symbol used in Old English usually transcribed with '7'? dab (ᛏ) 8 July 2005 17:01 (UTC)
- Far as I can tell from the Unicode index, no. Usually, graphic variants are not encoded in Unicode, but rather in the font. So if you had an Old English font, the normal /&/ would presumably display as [
7], just as the /g/ might look like a yogh. kwami 2005 July 9 02:17 (UTC)- well there you have it, there is a glyph for yogh, and for wynn, so why not for 7? dab (ᛏ) 9 July 2005 06:17 (UTC)
- Because wynn was a separate letter of the alphabet, and yogh became one as it diverged from gee. What you're asking for is merely a variant form of <&>. It's rather like asking for a Unicode value for cursive R. There's actually a font that is entirely ampersands - over 30 variant forms, I believe. That said, I believe there is an encoding for the Classical Roman ampersand; I don't know what motivating that particular choice. (There's also a Greek ampersand, based on the letter kappa, but as far as I know it's not supported by Unicode either.) Unicode is inconsistant at times. kwami 2005 July 9 06:29 (UTC)
- it's ok, I understand Unicode. You may as well say that the wynn rune is a variant of wynn, or that w is a variant of wynn, or that Greek Epsilon is a variant of E, since '&' is for Latin et and 7 is for Old English and. But if there isn't a glyph, well, maybe in some future version, no problem. dab (ᛏ) 9 July 2005 08:58 (UTC)
- The Unicode Consortium is really annoying in this. You may have more luck with the Medieval Unicode Font Initiative, which includes the sign at F142. If you have Junicode or Leeds United installed this will show it: . Jordi·✆ 9 July 2005 13:26 (UTC)
- it's ok, I understand Unicode. You may as well say that the wynn rune is a variant of wynn, or that w is a variant of wynn, or that Greek Epsilon is a variant of E, since '&' is for Latin et and 7 is for Old English and. But if there isn't a glyph, well, maybe in some future version, no problem. dab (ᛏ) 9 July 2005 08:58 (UTC)
- Because wynn was a separate letter of the alphabet, and yogh became one as it diverged from gee. What you're asking for is merely a variant form of <&>. It's rather like asking for a Unicode value for cursive R. There's actually a font that is entirely ampersands - over 30 variant forms, I believe. That said, I believe there is an encoding for the Classical Roman ampersand; I don't know what motivating that particular choice. (There's also a Greek ampersand, based on the letter kappa, but as far as I know it's not supported by Unicode either.) Unicode is inconsistant at times. kwami 2005 July 9 06:29 (UTC)
- well there you have it, there is a glyph for yogh, and for wynn, so why not for 7? dab (ᛏ) 9 July 2005 06:17 (UTC)
ok, I can't use these in article namespace anyway. I was looking for the best way to transcribe the Kirkdale sundial inscription, and I'm just using '7' now. There is a reason people use "incorrect" '7', and not '&' (which is readily availabe) for Old English, indicative of the fact that it is not considered the same character, so imho, there really should be a unicode assignment. dab (ᛏ) 9 July 2005 13:46 (UTC)
- As a side note, guess why the ampersand is placed where it is on Qwerty keyboards? Jordi·✆ 9 July 2005 13:50 (UTC)
- Cool! kwami 2005 July 9 19:10 (UTC)
- surely this is a coincidence? After all, the first typewriters were not built for or by medievalists? dab (ᛏ) 12:19, 10 July 2005 (UTC)
Alphabetical Order
I am curious about the history of Alphabetical order. I do not see this topic addressed, and when I searched the Internet using Google, I found only pages that made references to books or other pages that no longer existed.
I remember hearing once that the "Alphabet Song" was the first time that Alphabetical Order was created, but I have no documents to back this up, and I know that is likely only an urban legend.
Also, would this history belong in this page about the Enlish Alphabet, or under Collation (which discusses Alphabetical Order, but not the history of it) or in its own page?
Thanks, Tetrakatus
- It's much, much older than the "alphabet song". IIRC the oldest known example of alphabetical order is on a clay tablet found in the ruins of Ugarit, dating back to 1400 to 1200 B.C.. It contains the Ugarit alphabet in order from àlfu to tawru, but it is believed to have held the full Ugarit alphabet before being broken. See here. Ugarit even had an "alphabet poem"! However alphabetical order is probably much, much older than that even. Jordi·✆ 18:25, 5 August 2005 (UTC)
- The alphabet comes from Latin; it is because these letters were all in the same order in Latin except J, U, and W, which did not exist. J was put right after I because it is just a form, and W after V for a similar reason. For why U was place before V, I'm not sure. In turn, the Latin alphabet comes mostly from Greek, and had only 3 letters, G, Y, and Z, inconsistent with Greek. For Y and Z, the reason is probably because these are the letters used only in words borrowed from Greek. For G being located in its current position, I think it is because they wanted G to be put in a location that formerly belonged to a letter Latin didn't need; zeta (which also happens to be one of the letters put at the end for use in words borrowed from Greek.) In turn, I'm not sure how the order of the Greek alphabet turned out to be that way; but if you know, feel free to answer. 66.32.221.106 00:48, 30 September 2005 (UTC)
- Some of this info is in the Alphabet, History of the alphabet, or Middle Bronze Age alphabets articles (I forget which). All we know for Egyptian is that one of their dictionaries started with H for Ibis (originally Hibis), because the Ibis was the totem of Thoth, the patron god of writing. We don't know if they actually had an alphabetic order. There are two ancient orders, the North Semitic and South Semitic order, both attested in Ugaritic. (The southern order survives today in Ethiopic.) We have absolutely no idea where they came from, or what motivated the order. It could be a rhyme, there could be religious significance, or it could simply be completely arbitrary (although somehow I doubt the latter). The Semitic alphabet was gradually whittled down to 22 letters in Phoenician, but the northern order was not changed except for dropping out letters that weren't needed in one dialect or another along the way, and maybe confusing some of the S sounds.
- The longer orders you can find at Ugaritic alphabet. The "Reduced Levantine abjad" (used for Hebrew and Phoenician) was,
- ’ b g d h w z ħ ţ y k l m n s c p ş q r š t
- The Greeks kept this order (turning the consonant letters ’ h y c into the vowel letters a e i o), split w into w plus u (they kept w where it was and placed u at the end of the alphabet), and then tacked on a couple new letters (one of which remains with us as X). They later dropped the letters w (digamma), s (sampi), and q.
- The longer orders you can find at Ugaritic alphabet. The "Reduced Levantine abjad" (used for Hebrew and Phoenician) was,
- The Etruscans got their alphabet from the Western Greeks, whose alphabet was a little different from the Eastern Greeks. For example, the Western Greeks kept the Phoenician letter ħ as an [h], rather than as the vowel eta. (This is our letter <H>.) Also, that X-shaped letter stood for [ks] rather than for [kh]. (This is our letter <X>.) Also, the Etruscans didn't have a [g] sound, so they pronounced the letter g as [k]. (This is our letter <C>.) They pronounced the letter z as [ts], and the letter w as [v]. For the sound [f], which didn't exist in Greek, they used the digraph wh.
- The Romans borrowed this alphabet, and dropped most of the letters they didn't need. They didn't have a [v] sound, and since they therefore never wrote w for [v], they simplified the wh digraph for [f] to just w. (This is our letter <F>.) They didn't need z and dropped it, and they dropped everything after X. Now, the Romans did have a [g] sound, so they created a new letter for [g] out of the original letter g (which was by then Roman <C>), which they did by adding an extra line to it. That is, <G> was derived from <C> the same way the letters Ç, Ć, and Č were.
- So why did the Romans put G where z used to be? Well, they used the alphabet not only as letters, but as numerals. <A> was used for 1, <B> for 2, <C> for 3, etc. <Z> was number 7. When they dropped <Z>, they lost a numeral, and they used the new letter <G> to fill the gap. (Long after the Greeks had dropped digamma and sanpi as letters, they kept using them as numbers, before later substituting new symbols, so this was a normal thing to do.)
- Now the Romans had the alphabet
- A B C D E F G H I K L M N O P Q R S T U X
- Now the Romans had the alphabet
- <V>, by the way, was the vowel [u]. Remember, the Romans had no [v] sound. The difference between <U> and <V> at this stage was just one of style, like the two forms of lower-case <a> and <g> in the English alphabet.
- Meanwhile, Greek had changed. The sound [u] had shifted to [y] (that is, to the sound of a German ü). So when the Romans conquered Greece, and started borrowing lots of Greek words, they had two new sounds they couldn't write, [z] and [y]. So they borrowed the Greek letters and stuck them on to the end of the Latin alphabet, our letters Y (still known as "Greek I" in Spanish) and Z (still called "zed" (from "zeta") in the UK). (Other Greek sounds they wrote as digraphs, CH, TH, PH.)
- In the medieval period, the Romance languages had changed, and the Latin alphabet was also used to write Germanic and Celtic languages. Now, many of these languages had both a [u] and a [v], both an [i] and a [j], so eventually people started differentiating <I> and <J>, and <V>, <U>, <W> (<W> is still known as "German V" in some languages). They also added the letter <&> to the end of the alphabet (for 27 letters), which remained until the end of the 19th century. This is how <&> got the name "ampersand": When you recited the alphabet, and got to the end, you sang "double-u, ex, wy, zed, and per se 'and'." Now, little children didn't understand that Latin per se meant 'by itself', and that what they were really saying was something like "and the letter that by itself means 'and'," so they slurred the rhyme together and ended it as "double-u, ex, wy, zed, ampersand". (The <&> was later dropped for being confusing. By the way, it is a ligature of <Et>, the Latin word for 'and'.) kwami 06:40, 30 September 2005 (UTC)
- I can't find any evidence about the Romans using Z for 7; I always thought the Romans used VII for 7. Georgia guy 18:35, 12 November 2005 (UTC)
- They did. For writing, arithmatic, accounting, taxes, etc, they used the Roman numerals. However, the alphabet also had a numerical order to it. It wasn't used for much - perhaps it was just a mystical association - but the idea is that the tradition was strong enough, or perhaps Greek influence was strong enough, for a gap to be left at position #7 when the letter Z was dropped, and that this gap was filled with the new letter G. I don't know any details, but I've come similar accounts several places. kwami 19:54, 12 November 2005 (UTC)
Dotting your wyes
I've just deleted this from the notes section of the article:
- (When the letter wy was adopted during Middle English, it had a dot over it to distinguish it from thorn, so in such archaisms y without a dot is thorn, not wy.)
It's problematic for a few reasons. Firstly, wy was used in Old English (when it meant IPA /y/ and /yː/), rather than being adopted during Middle English (when it came to mean /j/, /i/ etc.). (In fact, I understand—but I’m not sure from where—that the name wy comes from an attempt to maintain the labialness of /yː/ to help distinguish it from the letter /iː/, with which it would otherwise have become homophonous. Of course, I don't know where I heard that from so I could've just made it up...)
Secondly, thorn and wy were often drawn the same. Sometimes with a wy-like glyph, other times with a thorn-like glyph. They were also often drawn differently, when wy was usually drawn with a wy-like glyph, and thorn with a thorn-like one. Although the dotless thorn/dotfull wye distinction might've been made by some scribes, it was not as common (and certainly not nearly universal) as the sentence implies.
—Felix the Cassowary (ɑe hɪː jɐ) 11:58, 25 October 2005 (UTC)
- I'd imagine that a dot would only make a wye look more like a thorn. Jimp 07:20, 21 December 2005 (UTC)
Ampersand as 27th letter
What is the source for this bit of the article? I don't doubt the information but I've never seen it in literature.
- Can't find a good source offhand, though I've seen it several places. Here's a citation from the OED:
- 1882 FREEMAN in Longm. Mag. I. 95 ‘Ampussy and,’ that is, in full ‘and per se, and,’ is the name of the sign for the conjunction and, &, which used to be printed at the end of the alphabet.
- Alt spellings include amsiam.
- Also found [2],
- 1.OEngl.1011. Byrhtferð. 1929. Byrhtferth’s Manual (AD 1011) now edited for the first time from MS. Ashmole 328 in the Bodleian library. Samuel John Crawford, ed. (Early English Text Society, OS; 177) London: Oxford University Press.
- [On p. 203 of his manuscript, Byrhtferð gives what could be considered an Old English character set, namely the Latin alphabet (which includes the sign & ‘ampersand’), and the Old English additional letters, as well as the nota ⁊ ‘ond’). Giving also the numeric values, Byrhtferð shows a concern for ordering, though his 11th-century interests are not, perhaps, the same as our own:
- “Heræfter we wyllað openian uplendiscum preostum þæra <stafena> gerena æfter Lydenwara gesceade. Ærest we willað hig amearkian togædere, ⁊ syððan heora todælednyssa we willað gekyðan on þa wisan þe þa boceras habbað ⁊ healdað; ⁊ eac we willað þa stafas onsundron gewriðan þe þa estfullan preostas on heora getæle habbað ⁊ þæræfter Ebreiscra abecede we willað geswutelian, ⁊ Grecisra. ⁊ þæt getæl þæra stafena we þencað to cyþanne, forþon we witon þæt hyt mæg fremian.”
- (‘We will next reveal to country priests the mysteries of the letters of the alphabet in accordance with the reasoning of the Romans. First of all we will write them down together, and then we will make known their divisions in the manner which scholars have and hold, and likewise we will group the letters separately, which devout priests have in their reckoning, and afterwards we will set forth the alphabet of the Hebrews, and that of the Greeks; and it is our intention to make known the numerical value of the letters, because we know that it may be of advantage.’)”
- Latin A B C D E F G H I K L M N O P Q R S T V X Y Z ⁊
- English A B C D E F G H I K L M N O P Q R S T V X Y Z & ⁊ Ƿ Þ Ð Æ
Still, what shall we do with "⁊"? This is the glyph for "not", not the Anglo-Saxon glyph for "and", and the similarity is coincidential; we may as well use "7". dab (ᛏ) 16:19, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
- "⁊" is U+204A TIRONIAN SIGN ET, the "and" sign itself. The glyph for "not" is "¬" U+00AC and should look somewhat different. —Muke Tever talk (la.wiktionary) 19:52, 10 February 2006 (UTC)
- great, thank you! dab (ᛏ) 13:54, 15 September 2006 (UTC)
Moved back to English alphabet
I thought the current title was self explainatory, but ChrisW felt that moving it to Abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz would make it move easily accessable. How?
The title "Abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz" to me is long and seems a bit silly to use as a title of an article, and I don't think it makes the subject any clearer, then the title "English alphabet". Marco79 13:30, 1 May 2006 (UTC)
Does it exist?
Is there really any such thing as the English alphabet? Isn't it simply the same thing as the Roman alphabet (or "Latin" alphabet as Wikipedia insists on calling it)? I know the Romans didn't originally use all 26 letters, but this article itself states that the English alphabet consists of "the 26 letters of the Latin alphabet", so that's clearly what the term Roman or Latin alphabet means to people today. -19:36, 14 September 2007 (UTC)
- Graphically it's the same thing. But the sound values are different. It's common to speak of the "X alphabet" to mean the Latin (or whatever) alphabet as used in language X. We're not going to bother with articles on most other languages, like "Italian alphabet", but since this is English Wikipedia, a little anglocentrism is appropriate. kwami 20:14, 14 September 2007 (UTC)
- Latin alphabet was not used only by Romans. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 177.4.62.112 (talk) 16:37, 17 August 2012 (UTC)
Hey can i use the ABC code thing on my website I really need one Supermike 23:14 April 21 2008
W
There was an interesting pronunciation suggestion: W || double-u /ˈdʌbəl juː/ or /ˈdʌbuːjuː/ I've undone it but mostly because I don't believe the transcription. Around here we tend to say something like /ˈdʌbɔju/ ... but I'm not great with transcription either.
My issue is with the long u sound /uː/. Maybe I'm wrong, but I think the "ː" diacritic is supposed to denote the lenghtening of the vowel sound to the point of full stress in a stress-timed language like english. Imagine saying "soon" like a brit: now, stress it, like you're making a strong point of it. That's the sound for /uː/ as I know it. It isn't just long in pronunciation, it's actually (time-wise) long.
That would make /ˈdʌbuːjuː/ sound especially strange to my american ears. The dialects of english where a /uː/ is common are like for example in the UK. I feel confident they (you, whatever, sorry for the US-centricity) don't pronounce double-u to rhyme with "do-bool-yool". But please revert my edit if you do know better. — robbiemuffin page talk 02:25, 12 June 2008 (UTC)
- So you agree the el is usually not pronounced?
- The /uː/ is a convention. [uː], being phonetic, would be a long vowel, but /uː/ is not, at least not necessarily. It is whatever you define it to be, and here we've defined it to be the vowel of soon and to. The latter often isn't stressed, and certainly isn't long, but it's still /uː/.
- What would you say the second syllable in double-u rhymes with? kwami (talk) 02:53, 12 June 2008 (UTC)
- Looking over your page, I think you definitely know more about phonetics that I do. Please revert my edit if you think I'm wrong. I'm looking at the list, and the stress marks are everywhere. To my eyes, that's stylized, but it is the convention used. To me, it matches the alphabet as we sing it, not as we say it (compare the spanish ipa chart, their "i" in use is how we say the letter "e", if not quite a bit stronger, and they still do not have the emphasis mark). But I certainly do drop the "el"! — robbiemuffin page talk 00:19, 13 June 2008 (UTC)
Pronouncing the "el" does not sound artificially formal to my British ears - it just sounds like correct English. I don't want to revert (again) without consensus - but all the sources I can find give the el-included version as the only or primary pronunciation. The citation given implies that el-dropping is not standard English. Also note that the articles W and Pronunciation of "www" use the el-included version. Midnight Madness (talk) 02:13, 23 February 2009 (UTC)
- You're right that we should have both. BTW, I never hear anyone say /ˈdʌbəl juː/ for www unless they're talking to someone who doesn't know what the internet is. I always hear /ˈdʌbəjə/ or /ˈdʌbjə/. kwami (talk) 02:21, 23 February 2009 (UTC)
spellings of names
In the individual articles, alt. spellings are given as X ecks, V ve, etc. I don't have Webster's 3rd to verify. Does someone else? There are all kinds of archaic spellings, but we normally keep away from those, so I've been deleting these alts. kwami (talk) 20:44, 16 November 2008 (UTC)
- For reference, the NOAD spells each letter by itself, in both capitalizations (e.g., A and a), and only spells out the four letter names aitch, vee, zed, and zee. Spelled-out names of letters occur in the etymologies of a number of closely-related things, but these names don't denote the actual letters: eff (euphemism, e.g., “eff off”), ell (L-shaped thing), em and en (typographic measures), oh (zero, as in “one oh two”), ess (S-shaped thing), tee (shape of a capital T), wye (support or structure shaped like a Y). —Michael Z. 2008-11-17 05:56 z
- Actually, they do denote the actual letters, or the sounds they represent (the difference is often vague), but such usage is rare, as people usually just use the letters themselves.
- A & O: "Mouthing out his hollow oes and aes."
- B: "The chiefest part of this people-pleasing spectacle, consisted in three Bees, viz. Boyes, Beasts, and Bels."
- F: "If ye drawe in length and therewithall put your under lippe to your ouer teeth, ye shall heare the verie sound of EF."
- G & H: "If one branch of English society drops its initial aitches, and another branch ignores its terminal gees."
- L: "If Sore be sore, then ell to Sore, makes fiftie sores O sorell: Of one sore I an hundred make by adding but one more L."
- P: "Three Pees haue peppered me, The Punck, the Pot, and Pipe of smoake."
- R: "There was an V and thre arres to-gydre."
- R: "iij ares for iij Richardes þat bene of noble fames."
- Y: "... it appeareth to be compounded of u and i, which both spelled togither soundeth as we write Wy."
- Y: "The olde name of :y: (which is wy)"
- Interesting about NOAD. I wonder why they picked aitch and vee? kwami (talk) 08:54, 17 November 2008 (UTC)
- Actually, they do denote the actual letters, or the sounds they represent (the difference is often vague), but such usage is rare, as people usually just use the letters themselves.
- I know, but I meant that in this dictionary they're only specifically defined as such. Actually, I made a mistake—in NOAD the letters are defined as the letters and their entries don't refer to the names, while the names have separate headwords defined as “the name of the letter X”. I'm guessing it just lists the most common ones, and perhaps there are more in the Concise and OED. I noticed that my CanOD also defines ess as a letter, but was too lazy to go through the paper dictionary systematically.
Merger proposal
- I oppose the suggested merge with Latin alphabet. English is just one of many languages whose writing system is based on the Latin alphabet. What about French alphabet, German alphabet, Italian alphabet, Portuguese alphabet, etc. etc. Are we going to merge all these articles to Latin alphabet? I think not. 86.134.90.121 (talk) 04:17, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
I agree. This article is getting quite detailed, and a merge would be inappropriate. I'm removing the merge notices for now. If the proponent would care to explain the reasons for the merge here, he is welcome to restore the templates. —Michael Z. 2008-12-04 06:28 z
Colonial period - double ss
In the time leading up to Benjamin Franklin's era, typesetters employed an odd kind of double S character, reminiscent of the German character eszett. Is there a name for this kind of letter? It looks kind of like the letter f but without the horizontal stroke that crosses the middle. 198.177.27.27 (talk) 00:25, 15 March 2009 (UTC)
Isn't the colonial double S eszett? what's the difference? -Panther (talk) 01:18, 23 June 2009 (UTC)
- It's long S plus short S. Eszett derives from a long-ess–zed digraph. Though they do end up looking similar. kwami (talk) 00:30, 10 September 2009 (UTC)
Ash and Oethel
For what reason are these two letters being removed from the table in the introduction. They are clearly letters in the english alphabet, their lack of use in certain dialects does not preclude their existance. XavierGreen (talk) 23:34, 9 September 2009 (UTC)
- No, they're digraphs/ligatures, no more separate letters than fi is a letter, or long S. When you recite the alphabet, where do they come in? In your dictionary, where are the ash and oethel entries? At the very least, we need a WP:RS rather than just your opinion. kwami (talk) 00:29, 10 September 2009 (UTC)
- Since i am from the united states my dialect of english does not use Ash and Oethel. However proper english does indeed use ethel and oethel. I can indeed find you several editions of "Modern English" dictionaries that use ash and oethel. And according to your logic that ligatures are not letters than the ligature W should also not be included in the introduction. A ligature is simply a type of letter, it is the usage of a character that determines its status as a letter. Ash and Oethel represent distinct phonetic sounds, fi is not an independent phonetic sound but rather two, while Æ only represents a single phonetic sound. The status of a character being a ligature merely infers that its pictographic origons lay in the combination of two other character's pictographs, and has nothing to do with phonetics. XavierGreen (talk) 03:40, 10 September 2009 (UTC)
- You're right about it being the usage of a character that determines its status; my argument is exactly that. I assume we're taking the names 'ash' and 'oethel' as shortcuts: those letters don't actually exist in Modern English. Ash and oethel were runes, and the names were applied to the Old English letters æ /æ/ and œ /ø/ used to transcribe those runes. The similarity to Latin æ and œ, which we're talking about here, is just that: graphical similarity. They are not actually the same letters; indeed, Latin æ and œ, both pronounced /i:/ in English, have never been considered letters, any more than ch is considered a letter. (In Spanish, ch is a letter of the alphabet; in English it is not, even though it's in the dictionary. Spanish ch being a letter doesn't make its English homograph a letter any more than Old English æ, œ being letters make their Modern homographs letters.) Anyway, as I said, if you wish to say that every dictionary and English reader in the world is wrong, you need something more than your opinion to back you up. kwami (talk) 04:36, 10 September 2009 (UTC)
- If you are not a speaker of british english, than you are correct in your assumtion that use of these two letters is wrong as they are not used in any branching dialect of english (Australian english, Nigerian english, bermudan, ect). Only in proper writing use of the main dialect (british english) are these two letters in use. XavierGreen (talk) 07:36, 13 September 2009 (UTC)
- You're right about it being the usage of a character that determines its status; my argument is exactly that. I assume we're taking the names 'ash' and 'oethel' as shortcuts: those letters don't actually exist in Modern English. Ash and oethel were runes, and the names were applied to the Old English letters æ /æ/ and œ /ø/ used to transcribe those runes. The similarity to Latin æ and œ, which we're talking about here, is just that: graphical similarity. They are not actually the same letters; indeed, Latin æ and œ, both pronounced /i:/ in English, have never been considered letters, any more than ch is considered a letter. (In Spanish, ch is a letter of the alphabet; in English it is not, even though it's in the dictionary. Spanish ch being a letter doesn't make its English homograph a letter any more than Old English æ, œ being letters make their Modern homographs letters.) Anyway, as I said, if you wish to say that every dictionary and English reader in the world is wrong, you need something more than your opinion to back you up. kwami (talk) 04:36, 10 September 2009 (UTC)
- "Phonetic sound" is irrelevant; "sh" represents one phoneme in English, whereas "a" doesn't. Which dictionaries are you claiming use ash and oethel, not just as ligatures, but as characters? Do words starting with æ come between a and b? Can you show me a book for children that includes æ and œ in the alphabet? Where do they fit?--Prosfilaes (talk) 23:59, 12 September 2009 (UTC)
- All letters are representative of phonetics. A ligature is a character, merely it's pictographic shape is devolved from the combination of two other pictographs. By the logic you use (that a ligature is not a letter) the letter W (which is a ligature) should not be listed either. Most words involving ash and oethel are hardly the subject of childrens literature, and so that is an unfair demand (septicæmia is seldom a topic discussed in nightime stories), however I am quite sure i could find an example of a dictonary with the two letters in question in it, however i am in America where these two letters were never used, so searching for an english dictionary from the 1850's that was intended to be used in england might be difficult here in the states although i will make my best attempt to find one for you.XavierGreen (talk) 07:36, 13 September 2009 (UTC)
- "All letters are representative of phonetics." Whatever that means.
- All letters are representative of phonetics. A ligature is a character, merely it's pictographic shape is devolved from the combination of two other pictographs. By the logic you use (that a ligature is not a letter) the letter W (which is a ligature) should not be listed either. Most words involving ash and oethel are hardly the subject of childrens literature, and so that is an unfair demand (septicæmia is seldom a topic discussed in nightime stories), however I am quite sure i could find an example of a dictonary with the two letters in question in it, however i am in America where these two letters were never used, so searching for an english dictionary from the 1850's that was intended to be used in england might be difficult here in the states although i will make my best attempt to find one for you.XavierGreen (talk) 07:36, 13 September 2009 (UTC)
- A typographic ligature is not a character; it's a chunk of lead, or the computer equivalent, used so that the text looks good. W may have been a ligature, but when it's recited in the alphabet song, taught to children as part of the alphabet, and used as a head letter in dictionaries, it becomes a full letter of the alphabet. Letters that aren't the subject of children's literature aren't full letters in the alphabet, nor should we promote letters that aren't used in the most common dialects of English to the basic English alphabet; if they're only used in one dialect, there should be a separate table for that dialect.--Prosfilaes (talk) 14:30, 13 September 2009 (UTC)
- It appears you do not know the definition of a character, a character is just a pictograph used in writing. Periods and Commas are also characters. I suggest you read Grapheme for further examples. W still is a ligature, because its pictographic form still is litterally shown as two v's joined together (hence a ligature). Also which authority determines what letters are in the alphabet song, or their order? I could teach my children a differet variant of the song if i wanted to, would that mean whatever letters i addd to the song are in the english alphabet? English is an ungregulated language, so their is no central authority to defer to in an arguement such as this. I would support putting a footnote citing that these two letters are only used in the mother dialect (british english).XavierGreen (talk) 16:14, 13 September 2009 (UTC)
- A typographic ligature is not a character; it's a chunk of lead, or the computer equivalent, used so that the text looks good. W may have been a ligature, but when it's recited in the alphabet song, taught to children as part of the alphabet, and used as a head letter in dictionaries, it becomes a full letter of the alphabet. Letters that aren't the subject of children's literature aren't full letters in the alphabet, nor should we promote letters that aren't used in the most common dialects of English to the basic English alphabet; if they're only used in one dialect, there should be a separate table for that dialect.--Prosfilaes (talk) 14:30, 13 September 2009 (UTC)
discussion of obsolete letters, ligatures, etc. is well within the scope of this article, but they hardly belong in the table of basic letters. --dab (𒁳) 06:53, 10 September 2009 (UTC)
- I think he means the (pre)modern ligatures, as in pædiatric and cœlum. kwami (talk) 07:22, 10 September 2009 (UTC)
Audio
Does anyone have the wherewithal to re-record the recital of the alphabet and eliminate that awful "haitch"? 86.179.119.44 (talk) 18:17, 28 February 2011 (UTC)
- haitch is used in certain English dialects, but 'aitch should also be included as should both zed and zee. -- PBS (talk) 15:59, 8 April 2011 (UTC)
Letter names and spellings
I'm at a loss for finding out how the letters came to be named, or their names spelled. --Pawyilee (talk) 13:31, 3 September 2011 (UTC)
- I believe that is covered at Latin alphabet. The Romans abandoned the original names, and used the sound of the letter plus a vowel. In English, the vowels changed with the Great Vowel Shift. Spelling was just like any other word, spelled (more or less) as pronounced. There was more variation in spelling before things became so standardized. — kwami (talk) 10:11, 12 April 2012 (UTC)
Various questions
1. The modern English alphabet is a Latin alphabet consisting of 26 letters and 2 ligatures (æ and œ) -- Are æ and œ really considered part of the modern English alphabet? Is there such a thing as "a Latin alphabet"?
2. Written English also uses a number of digraphs, but they are not considered to be part of the alphabet. -- What "digraphs" is this talking about? If it means æ and œ then, first, are these digraphs, and second, it contradicts the above statement that says these are part of the alphabet. If it means digraphs like "sh", "ch", "th", etc., then this is more confusing to mention than not: it just adds unnecessary "why would anyone think they were; am I missing something?" confusion.
86.179.115.10 (talk) 02:49, 3 April 2012 (UTC)
- In some alphabets, digraphs such as SH are considered letters of the alphabet. Spanish, for example, until recently. And yes, there are many alphabets in the Latin family. The English alphabet is just one.
- Whether you want to consider the ligatures æ and œ as letters is a bit dubious, I agree. I'll think of rewording it. — kwami (talk) 10:14, 12 April 2012 (UTC)
- →"Is there such a thing as 'a Latin alphabet'?"
- The word "Latin" is used here in two ways:
- The Latin alphabet refers to the alphabet used to write the Latin language.
- That alphabet has been added to in forming the alphabets of many other languages. This larger set of letters is commonly called the "Latin script", and an alphabet using a set of letters from the Latin script is referred to as a Latin alphabet. A little confusing, perhaps, but that's the legacy of the development of our language. —Coroboy (talk) 15:19, 12 April 2012 (UTC)
- (OP) Thanks, I think that reads better. The one comment I would make is that "Some traditions ... consider the ampersand (&) part of the alphabet" can be read as implying that some people still consider "&" a part of the alphabet, which seems dubious to me. Should we state more explicitly that this was a historical idea no longer followed? 86.160.210.183 (talk) 00:44, 17 April 2012 (UTC)
English Alphabet meanings
I could find out English Alphabet meanings of letters. So, I would put the trace of mine in this talk page. --Goldendirt (talk) 09:30, 12 April 2012 (UTC)
- Those are not the meanings of the letters. They're the use of the letters for something else. — kwami (talk) 10:04, 12 April 2012 (UTC)
Plurals and apostrophes
From the article: "Of course, all letters may stand for themselves, generally in capitalized form (okay or OK, emcee or MC), and plurals may be based on these (aes or A's, cees or C's, etc.)"
Wrong. Those apostrophes are not being used as a contraction, nor are they being used for possession. It's like when people pluralise CD as CD's, just because people do it, that doesn't actually make it right. Personally, I quite like ′A′s, but good like finding a cite for it, pretty sure it's that thing I made up in school one day 143.92.1.33 (talk) 22:41, 12 November 2012 (UTC)
- Right in language is a factor of what's being used and what's accepted as correct. Just because people do it is a huge factor in whether or not it's right.--Prosfilaes (talk) 03:03, 13 November 2012 (UTC)
Origins
We really need to consider this. The Latin "Alphabet" was derived from the Greek "Alpha Beta" which was derived from the Semitic "Aluf Bet" Historygypsy (talk) 18:41, 7 June 2013 (UTC)
Computer vs. typewriter
Regarding this sentence:
- Informal English writing tends to omit diacritics because of their absence from the computer keyboard, while professional copywriters and typesetters tend to include them.
It seems to imply that computer keyboards are what caused diacritics to fall out of use in informal English writing. Or was it typewriters? Or was it the lack of teaching diacritics in elementary school? While the sentence may be accurate in a literal sense (considering that it's written in the present tense, and may be true about the present time), it seems to imply something that may be inaccurate about a cause-effect relationship in the evolution of English usage. My suggested improvement is to change "the computer keyboard" to "typewriter and computer keyboards". Opinions? HLachman (talk) 20:00, 23 July 2013 (UTC)
- It was happening with handwriting, before the advent of typewriter. Also the sentence is not correct because for example the British Government on its treaty publications (it is difficult to think of anything more formal) prior to the advent of the typewriter would often drop accent marks in the English language publications particularly if the were not used in French (the common language for treaties prior to World War I). -- PBS (talk)
This statement is wrong:
In the article, under Modern English it says "The letters þ and ð are still used in present-day Icelandic and Faroese". This sentence needs to be rephrased because thorn is not used in the Faroese alphabet. Source: well I learned the Faroese alphabet in school...
http://en.wiki.x.io/wiki/Faroese_alphabet — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2.109.245.85 (talk) 13:58, 17 October 2013 (UTC)
Byrhtferð
'In the year 1011, a writer named Byrhtferð ordered the Old English alphabet for numerological purposes.[2] He listed the 24 letters of the Latin alphabet (including ampersand) first, then 5 additional English letters, starting with the Tironian note ond (⁊) an insular symbol for and...' This is misleading, as Byrhtferð was in fact a conventional monk who e.g., derides astrology and gives numbers meanings only according to Christian tradition. In his Enchiridion ('Handbook') he simply presents the English alphabet in the conventional order of the day, which is clearly derived from the order of the Roman alphabet, which he shows alongside. Also, he includes W as one of the additional, non-Roman English letters, which is omitted in the Article page reference. The use of the quotation (Reference [2]) is also misleading, referring in fact to the mathematical value of Roman letters rather than numerological values of English ones. The order of the English alphabet is therefore traditional rather than numerological, as is the Roman alphabet, which derived from the time of the Greek. Byrhtferð shows that the letters of the Greek alphabet each had numerical values (so could therefore no doubt lend themselves to numerology) but the selectivity of the Romans in their choice of letters to represent numbers (which Byrhtferð also demonstrates) more or less seems to undermine applying numerological associations.--83.151.230.51 (talk) 18:08, 8 March 2014 (UTC)
- Okay. Do you have a ref for the W? — kwami (talk) 22:00, 8 March 2014 (UTC)
- Yes, Byrhtferð's Enchiridon itself (I believe it was known as 'Wynn' at that time, and represented differently.--5.150.92.174 (talk) 20:33, 12 March 2014 (UTC)
- We already have wynn. I thought you meant both wynn and double-u. — kwami (talk) 22:39, 12 March 2014 (UTC)
- Modern translations of Byrhtferð's Enchiridon display Wynn simply as W, as perhaps they should. In a sense, writers of Old English 'had w,' albeit not as we know it. To say they didn't could be seen as misleading.--83.151.230.52 (talk) 21:21, 13 March 2014 (UTC)
- Wynn is not double-u, but a separate letter. We often substitute ash and ethel too, but that doesn't mean they didn't exist. — kwami (talk) 09:25, 14 March 2014 (UTC)
- It is a distinct grapheme for the same phoneme, to be precise.--86.149.15.151 (talk) 16:01, 14 March 2014 (UTC)
- Letters are not phonemes. By your argument, K and Q are the same letter, as are eth and thorn. — kwami (talk) 20:03, 14 March 2014 (UTC)
- I didn't say letters are phonemes - letters are letters, a concept which links graphemes to particular phonemes. Wynn was lost thru conquest and eventually replaced with W. To say or imply to the uninitiated that there was no W in Old English is therefore a misleading half-truth. Where Wynn is depicted, I would therefore prefer to see a w in brackets after it, to make it clear that it isn't as alien as it looks.--83.151.230.51 (talk) 17:14, 16 March 2014 (UTC)
- Then I don't understand what you're saying. If OE did not have W, why would we say that it had W? Or don't we care, because we need to dumb down the article for readers who don't know what a W is? — kwami (talk) 06:12, 17 March 2014 (UTC)
- Our English concept of the letter W has two components: its sound (phoneme) and its appearance (the grapheme W,w). Therefore OE already had W in the first sense, but not in the second and full sense. I don't think readers who don't know or need to be reminded of this interesting little fact are 'dumb,' nor that we are 'dumbing things down' by including it. (And how long before your US use of 'dumb' becomes politically unacceptable, BTW?).--5.150.92.174 (talk) 15:17, 17 March 2014 (UTC)
- Then I don't understand what you're saying. If OE did not have W, why would we say that it had W? Or don't we care, because we need to dumb down the article for readers who don't know what a W is? — kwami (talk) 06:12, 17 March 2014 (UTC)
- I didn't say letters are phonemes - letters are letters, a concept which links graphemes to particular phonemes. Wynn was lost thru conquest and eventually replaced with W. To say or imply to the uninitiated that there was no W in Old English is therefore a misleading half-truth. Where Wynn is depicted, I would therefore prefer to see a w in brackets after it, to make it clear that it isn't as alien as it looks.--83.151.230.51 (talk) 17:14, 16 March 2014 (UTC)
- Letters are not phonemes. By your argument, K and Q are the same letter, as are eth and thorn. — kwami (talk) 20:03, 14 March 2014 (UTC)
- It is a distinct grapheme for the same phoneme, to be precise.--86.149.15.151 (talk) 16:01, 14 March 2014 (UTC)
- Wynn is not double-u, but a separate letter. We often substitute ash and ethel too, but that doesn't mean they didn't exist. — kwami (talk) 09:25, 14 March 2014 (UTC)
- Modern translations of Byrhtferð's Enchiridon display Wynn simply as W, as perhaps they should. In a sense, writers of Old English 'had w,' albeit not as we know it. To say they didn't could be seen as misleading.--83.151.230.52 (talk) 21:21, 13 March 2014 (UTC)
- We already have wynn. I thought you meant both wynn and double-u. — kwami (talk) 22:39, 12 March 2014 (UTC)
- Yes, Byrhtferð's Enchiridon itself (I believe it was known as 'Wynn' at that time, and represented differently.--5.150.92.174 (talk) 20:33, 12 March 2014 (UTC)
C-class, high-importance article
I see the talk page discussion for this article goes back many years. I also see that the article proper still cites very few sources. Do any of you who are watching this page have any sources to suggest? As I prepare to work with other editors to improve the English language article, it occurs to me that at least some of the better sources for that article should also be useful for editing this article. What reliable sources do you have at hand for looking up facts about the English alphabet? Who is currently active in watching this article who would like to bring it up to good article quality and eventually to featured article quality? This article enjoys many page views, according to the newly released top 10,000 pages report for 2014, so it occurs to me that now is a good time to build on the good work already done on this article over the years to improve to good article status by citing more reliable sources. Who else is interested in doing this? -- WeijiBaikeBianji (talk, how I edit) 17:28, 21 January 2015 (UTC)
Handwriting
Should we include examples of written letters, as in Russian Alphabet? We could pull them from this graphic and this one. I would be willing to do the work. Dconman2 (talk) 21:38, 6 March 2015 (UTC)
- The English alphabet is in a special position on the English Wikipedia, and besides, there's not a lot of consensus about English cursive letters. We could link to cursive, for lack of a better article.--Prosfilaes (talk) 13:03, 8 March 2015 (UTC)
Hyphen
There needs to be some mention of the hyphen which has two main uses in English:
- it is used to break a word in two, when that word will not fit on a single line during typesetting. The words so treated should be broken between whole syllables.
- such as syl-
- lable;
- but NOT sylla-
- ble.
- it is also used to write words when the break between syllables is unclear, including proper nouns, such as
- co-operate rather than cooperate or coŏperate.
- Mount Ku-ring-gai not Mount Kuringgai. Tabletop (talk) 08:50, 3 April 2015 (UTC)
cooperation is not obsolete
Currently the article says:
in obsolete spellings such as zoölogist and coöperation, they represent two.
This sentence is very unclear as coöperation may be obsolete and it obviously is not pronounced as is the example "chicken coop", but the far from obsolete cooperation is still used and is still not pronounced "oo" (one just has to learn how to pronounce it without the indicator that a diaeresis provides (it is naive [sic] to think otherwise)). -- PBS (talk)
- That's why it says "obsolete spellings". I find no way to interpret it the way you seem to have.--Prosfilaes (talk) 00:21, 20 May 2015 (UTC)
Unspell
Pretty sure this is primary sourced blogspam. [3] --NeilN talk to me 20:06, 26 June 2015 (UTC)
- Looks like it.--Prosfilaes (talk) 21:29, 26 June 2015 (UTC)
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