I still retain the episodic memory of my first encounter with the spelling of people. I was learning to read, and I got cat, mat, pat; I got lot, pot, dot; but I did not get people. Why the o, and why the le instead of el? Soon after I balked at Wednesday; surely that should be something like Wensday (or even Wenzday)? I had discovered the Latin alphabet’s historical irregularity (which may have contributed to my later focus on the regularity of natural laws studied by physics).
Shavian is a better English alphabet created in the mid twentieth century by Kingsley Read for a competition funded by the will of Nobel-Prize-winning Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw. In contrast to Latin’s 2 × 26 = 52 letters, Shavian’s 48 letters uniquely represent 48 English sounds. The letters can be drawn with single gestures and are rotations or reflections or compounds of companion letters. Often the shapes of the letters suggest their pronunciations; for example, most unvoiced letters are tall, and their voiced counterparts are deep. Different letter pronunciations can accommodate different English accents with the same spelling. Shavian has no capital letters, but a leading center dot denotes proper names.
Thanks, Mark! I enjoy reading your posts as well.