Shaw I believe was also a proponent of Esperanto. For a major writer in
English he certainly would qualify as a justifiably credited critic.
Lawrence
On Jan 4, 19:34, Sean 'Captain Napalm' Conner
wrote:
A Plan for the Improvement of English
Spelling
by Mark Twain
It is wonderful, although it's not by Mark Twain, but by M.J. Shields in a
letter to The Economist. It was in response to George Bernard Shaw's
suggestions to reform the English alphabet by adding 14 letters to
eliminate spelling anomalies. Another wonder in the same vein is to be
found at
http://www.d.kth.se/~d92-abj/humor/spelling_reform.html. It
concludes:
Kontinuing cis proses, ier after ier, we would eventuali hav a reali
sensibl writen langug. By 1975, wi ventyur tu sei, cer wud bi no mor uv ces
teribli trublsum difikultis, wic no tu leters usd to indikeit ce seim nois, and
laikwais no tui noises riten wic ce seim leter. Even Mr. Yaw, wi beliv, wud be
hapi in ce nog cat his drims fainali keim tru.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York