Why did Brits stop using viking symbols?

Why did Brits stop using viking symbols?

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>brits were cucked out of þ by the printing press

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English would be much better with þ and ae and without retarded french and latin words

Based Anglish enjoyer

ðe*

I wish we still used Thorn and Eth.
>Anglish
Yep I have been shilling for years that English needs a spelling reform.

>brits

Runes were incredibly inefficient

>archayyology
>encyclopayydia
>payydophile

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þat garbage was
1- interchangeable with þ
2- newer but survived for a shorter period of time
3- used to a much lesser extent
4- cringe and bluepilled

Probably because the educated class like most places was in the church, and they use latin.

latin uses those characters.

I thought he was referring to runes really.

then you're thick as shit really

How?

no u

That I sould want my gowly, and we heir but thre?
Humff, quod the Helandman, and turnd him about,
And at his plaid nuke the guly fell out.
Fy, quod Sanct Petir, thow will nevir do weill,
And thow bot new maid sa sone gais to steill.
Umff, quod the Helandman, and swere be yon kirk,
Sa lang as I may geir gett to steill, will I nevir wirk.

>Runes were incredibly inefficient
No they weren't, are you retarded?

croatian:
just learn the alphabet and you will know how to correctly pronounce every single word

italian:
just learn a couple of words and you will see a pattern in how those words are pronounced

english:
lmao dude just memorise every single word seperately

drunk

>just learn the alphabet and you will know how to correctly pronounce every single word
this is my language though we also have diagraphs.

what?

dude what i meant is that in order to correctly pronounce a word you quite literally just have to spell out the word really fast
thats definitely not how you do it in english

>everyone from the uk is english
alri

they have a distinct sound, we just don't think of there being multiple th sounds, so it seems redundant.
ð makes a softer th sound, as in 'the,' or 'then,' where you barely feel the sound coming out of your mouth, þ makes the hissier th sound, as in 'thin,' 'thaw.' try pronouncing each of those words with the opposite th sound, and you'll see it is definitely it's own sound
watch from 10:28 - youtube.com/watch?v=R_zjXZwD42Q&feature=youtu.be&t=628&ab_channel=JacksonCrawford

drunk english

ah ok my bad

I know that they have distinct sounds, just like ärabic has ث and ذ. But that way they of using them is only Icelandic.
Also, English does not voice its fricatives (f,s to v,z) in native words, therefore "that" would have been written as "þat" even if both letters stayed.

>develops seperately from english
>is english
alri

Those aren’t Viking syllables they were from Old English before the influence of Old Norse.

>interchangeable with þ
no, it's voiced

mong.
þ never stood for one sound.

I am speaking about ð
þ stands for the voiceless th sound

That is in Icelandic not English.