On Fri, Feb 01, 2013 at 12:37:47AM +0100, Marko Vojinovic wrote:
> On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 15:55:08 +0000
> Patrick O'Callaghan <pocallag...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Just out of interest, why do some people use the non-existent word
> > "i", not to mention other violations of capitalization rules when 1)
> > their Shift key is clearly not broken, and 2) they aren't the poet
> > e.e. cummings? I've seen a number of people do this (admittedly a tiny
> > minority) and never understood it. Do they think it's cool? Are they
> > expressing their inner rebel? Were they punished by their English
> > teacher at school? Is hitting Shift too much effort? Enquiring minds
> > want to know.
> 
> Speaking of that, I never understood why is the "I" capitalized in
> English?


        my first/last two pennies: "very early on", typesetters had
        difficulty telling the difference between "i" and "j" since
        manuscripts were written in longhand.

        I heard this in grade school, tho, so it may have been made up
        to keep students quiet.




> Or, to rephrase it in your words, what's with the "I"? ;-)
> 
> To begin with, I don't know of any other language which capitalizes
> this word. Also, while my English teachers were always very
> explicit that the "I" should always be capitalized, none of them has
> ever managed to give me a reasonable answer _why_ this is so.
> 
> While I agree with you that correct spelling is something worth taking
> care of in e-mail communication, I was always wondering about the
> completely "randomized" spelling rules in English language. Or rather
> the utter absence of any real rules. In other languages, those
> rules often actually make sense, and make the language easier to read
> and write.
> 
> For example, the concept of "spelling competitions" in elementary
> schools was completely foreign to me until I heard about it from English
> schoolchildren. In most other languages, knowing how to properly spell
> words does not need any advanced knowledge, and basically is not
> considered to be a skill worth competing over.
> 
> But English spelling is soooo contrived that people had to invent
> spell-checkers to deal with it. :-D
> 
> And let's not even start with the even more contrived problem of the
> proper *pronunciation* of the written English. ;-)
> 
> Best, :-)
> Marko
> 
> 
> 
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 Gary Kline  kl...@thought.org  http://www.thought.org  Public Service Unix
              Twenty-six years of service to the Unix community.

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