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Ya. And that's why KS pleases me more than SWF. But as I intend to
learn Cornish indeed, I'd like to learn it with a good spelling that
would please to the most and that we have online courses in that
spelling.<br>
In Breton it had been adopted a spelling that not pleases to all (and
I'm one of them) but I think that we should rescue our languages by all
the means (peaceful ones of course), and consensus should be attempted.<br>
Any which way you'll have to chose an official spelling if you want to
promote Cornish in the public live and schools, as YOU have got the
Cornish recognised by your state. Gwydn 'gas pys.<br>
<br>
Otherwise, I'd be interested seeing Hewitt's spelling, as I know it
beeing an arrangement of "etrerannyezhel"<br>
<br>
Skrivet eo bet gant Michael Everson:
<blockquote cite="mid:p06240823c487239e1df5@%5B192.168.1.112%5D"
type="cite">
<pre wrap="">At 00:13 +0200 2008-06-25, Koumanonff wrote:
</pre>
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<pre wrap="">I don't quite agree with the use of diacrisis as the words could be
understand by the context. I would prefer, if I can, diacrisis for
the vowel length. That's my thought.
</pre>
</blockquote>
<pre wrap=""><!---->
Everyone is a learner of Cornish, and this dialect feature is very
important. Some words have the alternation, some do not.
Vowel length in both the SWF and KS is marked by the quality of the
consonant which follows the vowel. Anomalous vowel length and quality
is not marked in the SWF, but is marked in KS. The bys/bes
alternation is one such quality.
</pre>
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