> 
> John Francis, discombobulated,  wrote:
> >
> > >
> > > <second-hand car salesman>
> > > What you've got here is your standard-issue alien.  As personified on
> > > X-files, the "post-mortem" film and various other media outputs.
> > > Combined with that, there are some lovely runic symbols - totally devoid
> > > of meaning but very, very pretty and guaranteed to make it go faster,
> > > er, wear nicer.
> > > </second-hand car salesman>
> > 
> > My first impression is that it simply says "HELLO"
> 
> hmmm
> and we think this because? ;)
> 
> (a) we watch too many X-Files episdoes
> (b) we are an alien - but with a different
> dialect?
> (c) we live in Roswell
> 
> ann getting siller by the minute
 
Assuming there was a real question there somewhere:

I've never watched the X-Files, and I've never been to Roswell.
Mind you, I am an official card-carrying [resident] alien.

*I* think it might say "HELLO" because that's what it looks like to me.
If you only half-look at it (the way you might if somebody wearing the
shirt was in a group of people nearby) you could get the impression of
some indeterminate character, a character with three horizontal strokes,
two copies of a character with a single upright, and another character.
That happens to be close enough to the gestalt image that triggers my
"HELLO" pattern recogniser.

As Ann probably knows, people who read a lot tend to recognise words
as a single object, rather than by mentally piecing together letters.
That's particularly important for irregular languages like English,
where a single-character change can have arbitrarily large effects
to how other characters are interpreted (bibles/bibless, for example).

So to me, at first glance, it looks like "HELLO".  A second look
shows up the discrepancies, but just getting me to take that second
look means the T-shirt is probably doing what the purchaser intended.

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