Ævar, I've been systematically correcting the links for "Thorn (letter)" and "Eth (letter)" to include the parentheticals for the letters neatly. I'd added a disambiguation page since Eth = a letter and Eth = a commune in France, but you've changed this and pointed to the disambiguation page. Wikipedia suggests that pointing to disambiguation pages isn't optimal. Evertype 14:33, 2004 Jul 9 (UTC)
I agree with the recent movement from Ð back to Eth (letter). Apple's Mac-Roman character set, unfortunately, does not have this character, so it is easier for users of that character set ever to find this article with its normal English name. Evertype 13:32, 2005 Mar 6 (UTC)
Can someone confirm whether this is accurate? I've seen old texts, and they write the with a thorn rather than an eth, plus I can recall reading that the y is a substitute for the former, and that either letter could be voiced or voiceless. But I'd like someone to make sure before I change this.
In the article, it says that the symbol is found in Old English, Icelandic, and Faroese. It says how it was pronounced in Old English and Icelandic, but not Faroese. Does anyone know how Faroese uses it? Branddobbe
Faroese: In the word maður (man), ð is pronounced like a v.
[edit] Moving aroundI'm going to move Ð to Ð (disambiguation) and Eth (letter) to Ð within the next two days. The reason for this is first that we do not need Ð at Eth (letter) since Ð is in ISO-8859-1 which the english Wikipedia uses and Đ and Ɖ are not the same letter as Ð so the confusion between them is none, since nobody would type in Ð thinking it was a page for Đ or Ɖ (those three do not appear in the same languages so nobody would have them simultaneously on their keyboard). Furthermore i plan to put this on the top of Ð:
This would be in tune with other none-ASCII letters in ISO 8859 which have had redirects for their english names point to the actual letter. -- Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason 10:59, 2004 Sep 10 (UTC)
[edit] Tau gallicum?I wonder if there is a relationship between the eth (and maybe the Đ too) with the "tau gallicum" ("gaulish T") used when writting old gaulish language; gaulish was first written in greek alphabet and the greek theta used for a somewhat similar gaulish, then roman influence made them switch to latin alphabet, which has less letters, and so they used a sort of barred D (which may have derived from the theta maybe?). I'm not a specialist in phonetics, but it seems to me that the usage the eth has some phonetic similarity; could old Norse have borrowed it from gaulish usage? Srtxg 07:05, 20 Feb 2005 (UTC) [edit] Norman dislike?In Middle English, ð was no longer used; the Normans did not like characters in English which did not exist in the Latin alphabet. Ð was replaced with th, unfortunately making the voiced consonant indistinguishable from the unvoiced one, as the letter þ was also replaced by this digraph. This is simply not true, by my understanding. Firstly, <ð> remained in common use until around the end of the 13th century - it is used, for example, in the Layamon text of Cotton Caligula A. ix (c.1275-1300) - that is, at least 200 years after the Norman Conquest. Secondly, it was replaced with <þ>, not <th>; <þ> remained in common use for another two centuries after that. Finally, I am not aware that there ever was a consistent use of <ð> for voiced and <þ> for unvoiced sounds in English, and the supposed Norman dislike of non-Latin letters can be ruled out altogether by the persistence of <þ>, and the introduction of yogh for sounds written <h> in Old English. I propose rewriting as follows: "Ð began to fall out of use in the Middle English period, and by the 14th century the /th/ sound was consistently written with þ instead."
[edit] Moved back to Eth (letter) per policy.See Wikipedia:Naming conventions (use English). "Ð" is not a letter in any form of contemporary English, and both Old English and Middle English are distinct languages from the modern tongue. Robert A West 19:18, 9 August 2005 (UTC) Oh, and if someone feels the need to move it back again, please take it to WP:RM. The default rule on Wikipedia has been elucidated by Jimbo Wales: "My perspective is that if I don't see it on my keyboard, and if I didn't sing it in the alphabet song, it's 'fancy' and therefore should be avoided." We should not do otherwise without consensus. Robert A West 19:32, 9 August 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Can't change the imageI've tried to edit the image and upload it, but it doesn't seem to be accepted. I am not sure why. The edit I want to make is to display Ðð Ðð rather than ðÐ ðÐ because capitals typically precede smalls in alphabet displays of this kind. Evertype 08:47, August 10, 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Delta - Eth equivalenceThe article says that Eth is the only letter capable of representing modern greek Delta's sound. I think this is not true. The traditional romanization has always used D, and, although the sounds does not exactly match, there is no other sound in greek more similar do D. You may also notice that D is spanish is often pronounced like Eth. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 190.135.135.183 (talk) 21:26, 31 August 2008 (UTC) Página espejo de la WikipediaDirectorio de Enlaces Directorio dmoz Directorio espejo dmoz Pedro Bernardo | ||||||||||||||||