Well this is off-topic to my off-topic question. Στάλθηκε από το Ταχυδρομείο Yahoo σε Android Στις Σάβ, 20 Αυγ, 2022 στις 13:34, ο χρήστηςYannis Haralambous<yannis1...@gmail.com> έγραψε: English (and French and German and many other languages) respect words of Greek origin andrepresent the rough breathing in some way (`H' in Latin alphabet, `Г' in Cyrillic alphabet, `ه' in Arabic,'ハ' in Japanese, etc.). Greeks themselves have chosen to destroy this cultural heritage by adopting the monotonic system…(because of the Saussurian doctrine that only oral language deserves to be considered, and therough breathing has not phonetic realization anymore so, according to Saussure and his Greekfollowers it should better disappear…) See https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02480230/document Yannis
Le 20 août 2022 à 11:21, Apostolos Syropoulos via XeTeX <xetex@tug.org> a écrit : Hi everybody, Many readers of this mailing list arenative English language speakers andthe following question is for them. Someone claimed that English people (I saymore generally English language speakers) learn at school why you write history andnot istory. Since I do not know I'd this holds, Iam asking: Is this true? Does someone whohas graduated from high-school know thereason why this happens? Kindest regards, Apostolos Syropoulos Στάλθηκε από το Ταχυδρομείο Yahoo σε Android | | | | Yannis HARALAMBOUS Professor Computer Science Department UMR CNRS 6285 Lab-STICC Technopôle Brest-Iroise CS 83818 29238 Brest Cedex 3, France Une École de l'IMT | | | Le tact dans l'audace, c'est de savoir jusqu'où on peut aller trop loin.(Jean Cocteau, Le Coq et l'Arlequin)