I came here to see if my Friday post was posted correctly. Oh yeah. I didn't do one yet. I'll be back.
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Here's a fun one. The evolution of the alphabet.
And then I found this...
Are you an alphabet chart junkie?
There are billions of people and a version of normal to go along with each one of them. No two versions are exactly the same. There will be hundreds of thousands of little things that make up your version of normal. With any luck you can find people that have close to the same idea of what normal is that you do. These are your friends. Anyone else you try to tolerate as best you can. .... The exact definition of normal depends on who's running the asylum.
11 comments:
Nah, not any sort of chart junkie.
I am amazed however that you find something new, and often fascinating, to post each and every day though.
Sue - I look for new stuff first. Then if I don't find something in a reasonable time I go to my blog fodder bookmarks or memes. I just counted and have about 450 blog fodder URLs and a couple of hundred memes. If I ever decide to hang up blogging I'll post them all at once in one big post.
Of course I'm an alphabet junkie! What else am I going to do as an old retired fart with a degree in Linguistics?
What? No mention of the elder and younger Futharks? Alphabets were not always in the sequence ABC.. Nor do I see Oggham anywhere :-(
There are a number of letters we could get rid of. The C or K could go, but I'd recommend it be the K so we don't had to get used to the A-B-Ds.
Do we really need a Z? or an H?
Of course, even if it made sense to change it -- we wouldn't. We're just too darned lazy.
Thanks for the information. That first one is downright pretty :-)
The first chart is interesting, if we follow it on a couple of years it will turn into emojo's and pretty well revert back to the original 😁
Bill - I was thinking of you when I posted this. Did you google all the charts? There's going to be a test tomorrow!
Stu - I know I know!😁 There's a LOT of stuff missing from these two charts. One site says there are about 6,500 languages spoken today. Another says 7,117 (rather specific). I'm sure not all of them have a written alphabet, but even if half of them do that's a lot of Unicode characters.
John - Good luck with that. How about the whole world switching to Esperanto?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanto
It's sort of like Swahili in Africa. There are 43 different languages in Africa, but everyone speaks Swahili.
Kathy - That's what first caught my attention. Pretty colors!
CC - I've seen memes comparing hieroglyphics to emojis.
Funny how that head evolved into a T.
Fascinating - I've never thought to look this up so thanks for posting about it. It's intriguing how so many of our modern letters are mirror image to earlier versions of them. It's also interesting how many people lament how our language is going to pot. It's easy to think that our current accepted customs are the way things always were, but it's far from true. These charts are a quick lesson in that reality.
Lady - Head to A?
Jenny - Now comes the hard part. Guessing what it will look like 5 iterations from now.
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