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This article feels to me as it was written in bad faith, trying and failing to prove a point, but then positing the point was proved.

The author happily start the article by submitting:

>The purpose of this page is to describe [...] the rules that tell you how to pronounce a written word correctly over 85% of the time.

but then they quietly show that with their whole page of rules, the reader will not actually pronounce 85% of the words correctly as they just claimed, but actually less than 60%. By arbitrarily deciding that a number of errors can be considered small, the author bumps the number of "correctly pronounced words" to 85%.

Are we talking about 85% of the whole language? No, just 5000 words. Even if they are the most frequent in the written language, they would still only account for around 95% of all the words.

The author position is:

- people complain about the English spelling all the time, saying it's horrible

- the English spelling is actually pretty systematic and this page will explain the rules to understand it

- when you will have mastered these rules, you will pronounce half of the words perfectly - for extremely common words such as "give", "get", "real", "very", "put", "half" you are still SOL

- the english spelling is not so horrible after all: as a perfect student you will only butcher more than 1 word every 10 spoken

To me, the author has proved the point he was trying to disprove.

(and in which rule do /ˈsɪŋɚ/ and /ˈfɪŋɡəɹ/ end up?)



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