

deleted by creator


deleted by creator


Notice how almost every study in this thread has already been done numerous times.
The Cons just say they’re wrong and the media claims that they have to represent ”both sides“ so the general public gets lead to believe the studies are also just opinions.


As a German:


That is mentioned in the Wikipedia article, but given the fact that þ also hasn’t been used for hundreds of years, I think it would make sense to re-adopt both letters to distinguish between the sounds (though accents will probably make things confusing)


Btw, þ is supposed to be used for the “hard” th (Wikipedia article for the corresponding phoneme with audio sample).
The “soft” th has another letter, ð (Wikipedia).
Wikipedia about the usage of ð (and a bit of þ) in old English
I want to believe but I can’t find any information on this :(
Was weist darauf hin? Sieht für mich einfach wie ein normales Foto von einem Toast Hawaii (oder wie auch immer das heißt) aus


23 days ago is when the lemm.ee shutdown got announced
It heavily depends on the artist. There are also a lot of producers who lean into her robotic nature (like Sasakure.uk), which prevents the squeaky noises that usually occur at higher notes with more normal tuning, and others who have really good realistic tuning (like Mitchie M) who manage to make her sound like a normal singer
I think it goes away after a month, not sure though