[Spellyans] Dauns and dauncya

Jon Mills j.mills at email.com
Wed Apr 25 15:38:06 BST 2012


Michael,
 Would you use yogh <ȝ> to transcribe the long-tailed-z found in the Breton Catholicon? There is no distinction in the pen strokes between that and yogh.
 Jon
----- Original Message -----
From: Michael Everson
Sent: 04/25/12 03:08 PM
To: Standard Cornish discussion list
Subject: Re: [Spellyans] Dauns and dauncya

 On 25 Apr 2012, at 14:54, Jon Mills wrote: > Words like 'ȝurl' follow English orthographic practice; 'ȝurl' is afterall an English loanword. Long-tailed-z in alternation with <th> is due to the influence of Breton orthography on Cornish. Breton cognates are written with long-tailed-z where Cornish has <th>. This practice is post Norman Conquest. Just as English orthography was influenced by Norman French orthographic practice, so Cornish was influenced by Norman French and Breton orthographic practice. I'm sorry, Jon, but there is no distinction in the pen-strokes. The *letter* is the same *letter*. It is not two different letters with identical shapes. Stokes was right to use the same letter to transcribe both. I will put together something to make this clearer. Michael Everson * http://www.evertype.com/ _______________________________________________ Spellyans mailing list Spellyans at kernowek.net http://kernowek.net/mailman/listinfo/spellyans_kernowek.net



_____________________________________ 
 Dr. Jon Mills, 
 University of Kent
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