T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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612.1 | | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Fri Jan 13 1989 22:30 | 4 |
| Remember that g, i, o, and q are not in the alphabet, as we Deccies
know it. If you are a hardware field-support engineer, you can recite
the Digital alphabet, forward and backward, with no pauses, leaving out
those letters. It does make "The Song" sounds a bit odd.
|
612.2 | | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Fri Jan 13 1989 23:48 | 4 |
| What was the Dr. Seuss (I think it was by him) book about
the letters that come after "z"?
Dan
|
612.3 | A serious answer to a silly question | HSSWS1::GREG | Malice Aforethought | Sat Jan 14 1989 00:22 | 7 |
|
Okay, here it is... henceforth, the letter "w" shall be pronounced
"uu" (or, "oooo", if you like). That is essentially the sound
it emparts on a word anyway, and it certainly sets the mouth
in the correct position.
- Greg
|
612.4 | | COOKIE::DEVINE | Bob Devine, CXN | Sat Jan 14 1989 01:39 | 4 |
| In French, the 'w' is called a "double-v".
If you are looking for new names, how about calling 'c' "ocean"? ;-)
|
612.5 | | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Sat Jan 14 1989 17:21 | 12 |
| The "J" and "U" seem to be younger than the other letters of
our alphabet. I've seen the "V" taking the place of "U" on
pvblic bvildings, for example. I also read that the early
Romans used "IIII" instead of "IV" because the latter was
the first two letters of Jupiter's (Ivpiter?) name. And of
course "w" is pronounced "double you" instead of "double vee".
So what is the history of the different letters of the
alphabet? Why are some of them relative newcomers? And
what about the "compose character" letters like "���"?
Dan
|
612.6 | DR. SEUSS | VAXWRK::SIMON | Hugs Welcome Anytime! | Mon Jan 16 1989 20:39 | 6 |
| Re: .2
On Beyond Zebra
---------------
(I love Dr. Seuss)
|
612.7 | | PSTJTT::TABER | KA1SVY -- the new lid on the block. | Tue Jan 17 1989 17:33 | 21 |
| > I've seen the "V" taking the place of "U" on
> pvblic bvildings, for example.
It was that way because it was very difficult to engrave a proper "U" in
stone with the tools available to the romans (which is where the custom
came from.)
> So what is the history of the different letters of the
> alphabet? Why are some of them relative newcomers? And
> what about the "compose character" letters like "���"?
"J" is a relative newcomer to the alphabet -- I believe it wasn't there
for most of the Roman's big section of history. The new characters get
added from languages other than english. I think the middle Europeans
brought the "J" in. The letters with diacritical markings come from
languages that didn't use the roman alphabet but switched over so they
could use standard printing type. Sometimes they'd try to replicate
letters they already had (the English "thorn" for example) and other
times they'd just indicate an alternate pronounciation was to be used.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
612.8 | Well *OH* Yeah? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Jan 19 1989 21:31 | 15 |
| Many many years ago, when I was an vndergradvate at the avgvst
Massachvsetts Institvte of Technology and a member of the crew,
we vsed to do sitvps while spelling ovt ovr alma mater's name.
And, course, we always shovted, at the tops of ovr lvngs,
emm aye ess ess aye see aitch VEE ess ee tee tee ess
eye enn ess tee eye tee VEE tee ee
oh eff
tee ee see aitch enn oh ell oh gee wye
Now, regarding this vbiqvitovs assertion that U vndvly stresses some poor
stonecvtter, why aren't all the Os rendered as boxes or diamonds?
len.
|
612.9 | Alphabet History, a short sketch | MINAR::BISHOP | | Fri Jan 20 1989 03:42 | 49 |
| The Roman alphabet is descended from a archaic Western
Greek one, and the source alphabet went something like this:
A B C D E Z F H I K L M N O P Q R S T V X Y
The Latin of the time needed neither "Z", nor "Y", and so they
were dropped. But it distinguished between the sound /k/,
(written "C") and the sound /g/, and so created a new letter
"G" to represent it. This new letter went into the position
freed up by dropping "Z":
A B C D E G F H I K L M N O P Q R S T V X
Once Rome became successful, it wanted culture, and words to
express that culture. Many words were borrowed from Classic
Greek, which re-introduced "Y" and "Z". Of course, as additions,
they went to the end.
A B C D E G F H I K L M N O P Q R S T V X Y Z
In the later Empire scribal convention lengthened the letter "I"
in certain circumstances (e.g, when initial before another vowel
or final in a number). Similarly, "V" was split into two forms,
one rounded and one not rounded. This probably follows an underlying
phonetic difference between /i/ and /y/ on the one hand, and /u/
and /v/ on the other. In both cases the vowel form was the first
in the sequence:
A B C D E G F H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V X Y Z
Old English was written with extra letters: thorn, edh and yodh,
but we moderns have dropped them. This dropping is probably due
to the fact that the first fonts were cast for printing Latin,
and thus did not have the supplementary letters of English.
Somehow "W" made it into the alphabet at this time, no doubt
due to the fact that it could easily be faked by "VV". Thorn
was faked with TH, edh was rare (scribes having replace it with
thorn in most cases), and yodh was replaced with "G" (and I
think "GH"). The result was our familiar sequence:
A B C D E G F H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
It is an interesting side-light on such limitations to note that
Welsh orthography suffers from the same restriction to a Latin
alphabet, even to the use of "C" to prepresent /k/, due to the
large number of /k/s in Welsh and the small number of "K"s in
the font available to the early printers in Wales.
-John Bishop
|
612.10 | | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Fri Jan 20 1989 08:02 | 1 |
| How did G and F get inverted in the alphabetical order?
|
612.11 | more order | MINAR::BISHOP | | Fri Jan 20 1989 18:10 | 14 |
| Re .9, .10: order of "G" and "F"
I'm not certain what the position of "F" ("digamma" to the
Greeks) was in the source alphabet. Digamma was dropped
from the alphabet used for Classical Greek, as was "Q"
("qoppa"), so I had to guess a bit at the actual location.
A comparison with the Hebrew order has "waw" ("F"?) before
"zayin" ("Z"), so that gives the ...EFG.. order, but I'm
not certain that "waw" and "digamma" are the same letter
(in form and history, of course, not sound!). The location
of "Q" is pretty clear from the Hebrew order.
-John
|
612.12 | | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Fri Jan 20 1989 18:40 | 3 |
| Thanks for the history.
Dan
|
612.13 | More than you ever wanted to know | MINAR::BISHOP | | Fri Jan 20 1989 19:02 | 13 |
| After a quick check of the Encyclopedia Britannica, I
can confirm that "waw" is "digamma", and so the order
"...E F Z..." (and thus later "...E F G...") is correct.
The Britannica also feels that the Latin alphabet is
taken from the Etruscan, rather than directly from a
Western Greek one.
The Britannica fails to give the "alphabetical" order
of runes (the "futhark"), or the "beth luis nion"
order, so it's not the last word...
-John Bishop
|
612.14 | Back to the original question | STAR::RDAVIS | The Man Without Quantities | Thu Mar 15 1990 17:03 | 11 |
| � So what happened to W? Double You?!!! ...
� Other exceptions, arguably, are H, Q and Y.
"W" is best pronounced "Woo-woo!".
"H" - "Hotcha", pronounced as in "Hot-cha-cha!"
"Q" - What's wrong with "Queue"?
"Y" - "Yip"
Ray
|