English is weird

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French Canadian living in Europe since 1989!
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Nothing weird about it.
 
I agree that English is weird in that so many words that are spelt the same can be pronounced differently. E.g. Wind, polish et al
 
I agree that English is weird in that so many words that are spelt the same can be pronounced differently. E.g. Wind, polish et al
From what I remember of the European languages I have studied, most have consistent pronunciation, but way more irregular verbs and often a veritable plethora of definite articles.
 
English is unusually irregular in grammar and in spelling. That's because English is a b*****d language with a long history of linguistic miscegenation behind its irregularities. For example, "ph" sounding "f" in a word tells you that it's derived from Greek (unless you're an American because they dumped the f-ing "ph"), whereas "f" in a long ancient Greek-sounding word means it's probably derived from Latin rather than Greek. That's a useful clue to the meaning of a word you haven't seen before. Another unusual feature of English is that it has an unusually large vocabulary -- not the everyday chatty vocabulary, but the language of well-educated writers. Bigger dictionaries in other words.

So how come Anglophone intellectuals manage this larger vocabulary than other languages? I suspect the etymological clues buried in those annoying irregularities are the clues which tempt literary Anglophones to explore the intricacies of the language. That helps to preserve some of the fine distinctions between similar words, such as the notorious theological pair "homoousios" & "homoiousios". Delve into that to discover that strictly speaking "homophobia" out to mean "fear of the same". There have been many proposals to regularise the spelling of English. That to me would be rather like knocking down half of Stonehenge to speed the traffic on the nearby main road.
 
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Where's the logic in some French words' genders? The example that springs to mind is "le c*n" - a very feminine part which has a male gender...


strictly speaking "homophobia" out to mean "fear of the same".

Easy to tell the difference when spoken - the Greek rooted version meaning "the same" is a short O while the Latin root has a long O. Then, just to confuse things even more, does the "homo" Latin root mean Man or man? Depending on that, both gay and straight women could potentially be described as homosexual... (Taken ad absurdum!)
 
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