Carl Lowenstein wrote:
On 7/1/07, Ralph Shumaker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[snip]
Tho I do *not* hold to the idea of carte blanch replacing with "z" every
part of every word that sounds like "z". I saw an article (I think by
Mark Twain) with this kind of approach. He would introduce an obvious
and simple change and procede to implement that change for the duration
of the article. Each change was perfectly logical, tho each
implementation made the resulting text progressively harder to read. I
think this approach would create too much backlash and the result may
end up worse than the start.
[snip]
Do read "Meihem in ce Klasrum"
< http://www.english-zone.com/index.php?page=1114&pid=81 >
While you're at it, notice that the web page has a Y2K bug in the
upper right corner.
carl
There it is. Thanks carl. I guess it wasn't Mark Twain after all.
I don't know if it's a good thing or a bad thing, but I noticed a few
spelling violations (in accordance with the spelling rules for that
particular section).
--
How do you test an uncooperative intelligence when it's smarter than
you? --Stewart Stremler
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