Username
Ceolfrid
Member Since
January 23, 2012
Total number of comments
6
Total number of votes received
0
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Latest Comments
“Anglish”
- April 5, 2012, 11:16am
þ:
I am definitely interested, will contact you via e-mail, and promise to provide feedback. Ic thankie the!
“Anglish”
- April 5, 2012, 10:26am
þ: These are good tidings, indeed. I have been following this thread for some time, now, and I am very interested in where this idea is going. I am trying (not very well) to use more Germanic words, and less Romance words, in my daily usage, and it would be good to have a resource from which to start.
How will you make your draft known to people? I would very much like to read it when it is available.
“Anglish”
- April 5, 2012, 6:47am
So, who is compiling and organizing all of these good suggestions into something more easily readable?
“Anglish”
- February 23, 2012, 4:07am
Regarding eth and thorn, I agree: they should be restored (ednewed?). In fact, I think that they should stand for separate sounds: eth standing for the 'hard' th-sound (z.B. 'these') and thorn standing for the 'soft' th-sound (z.B. 'things'). I think Icelandic does things that way.
Another possibility is to follow Tolkien's example. Tolkien, in his Elvish languages, used 'th' for the 'soft' th-sound, and 'dh' for the 'hard' th-sound.
“Anglish”
- January 23, 2012, 11:19am
This Anglish idea is outstanding, and I enjoy reading about it. I hope someone is keeping track of the word-treasury that is being made here.
Waes ge hael!
“Anglish”
Hello,
Does anyone know anything about this site:
http://ednewenglish.tripod.com/index.htm
The first sentence describing it says:
"Ednew English is dedicated to an awareness and restoration primarly of native English words."
There are lists of prefixes, suffixes, verbs, and so on; but there is no information about who the author is.
There are lots of interesting words there, but I wonder if they are actually words. For example, is "Ednew" actually a word?
Thanks,