Holy shitsnacks - what's þat, like a 1:50 scale model of 1701-A? Why would you sell þat‽
It's awesome, but where would you put it? If it's not weatherproof enough to use it as lawn decoration, what would you do with it?
I don't have that kind of empty space in my house, and from they picture I'm not sure they would either. Would need a dedicated room.
I'd want something a size bigger .... then I could just live in it
Get it in the garage, dry it out and clean it thoroughly. Then coat it with several layers of weather-resistant poly and mount on the front lawn. Boom, done.
Interior walls and furniture aren't as important.
Weather vane
FYI, þ is only supposed to be used for the "th" sound in "think" or "thin." The "th" sound in "that" is ð (eth).
In Icelandic, and before 1033. Thorn had replaced eth by þe Middle English period.
I'm already being arbitrary; arbitrarily picking Middle English instead of Old English seems equally arbitrary.
This is just not true. Eth and thorn were used interchangeably by English scribes. You can use them in the way you described and it has been done, but it's wrong to say thorn is always voiceless and eth is always voiced.
þat
b or p dude, just pick one.
Höfuðstaf þe-sins rita ég hvergi nema í vers upphafi því að hans atkvæði má eigi æxla þótt hann standi eftir raddarstaf í samstöfun eh?
Holy shitsnacks - what's þat, like a 1:50 scale model of 1701-A? Why would you sell þat‽
It's awesome, but where would you put it? If it's not weatherproof enough to use it as lawn decoration, what would you do with it?
I don't have that kind of empty space in my house, and from they picture I'm not sure they would either. Would need a dedicated room.
I'd want something a size bigger .... then I could just live in it
Get it in the garage, dry it out and clean it thoroughly. Then coat it with several layers of weather-resistant poly and mount on the front lawn. Boom, done.
Interior walls and furniture aren't as important.
Weather vane
FYI, þ is only supposed to be used for the "th" sound in "think" or "thin." The "th" sound in "that" is ð (eth).
In Icelandic, and before 1033. Thorn had replaced eth by þe Middle English period.
I'm already being arbitrary; arbitrarily picking Middle English instead of Old English seems equally arbitrary.
This is just not true. Eth and thorn were used interchangeably by English scribes. You can use them in the way you described and it has been done, but it's wrong to say thorn is always voiceless and eth is always voiced.
b or p dude, just pick one.
Höfuðstaf þe-sins rita ég hvergi nema í vers upphafi því að hans atkvæði má eigi æxla þótt hann standi eftir raddarstaf í samstöfun eh?