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æ (called an ash), which sounded like the “a” of “cat”; þ (thorn), which could sound like the voiceless “th” of “thing” or the voiced “th” of “the”; ð (eth), which was used more or less interchangeably with the þ (thorn) for those “th” sounds; ƿ (wynn), an early “w”; ʒ (yogh), which could sound like “y” or like the “ch” of the German ich. (For instance, “niȝth,” a Middle English spelling of “night,” sounded like “nicht.”)

The Grammarphobia Blog: Why Old English Looks So Weird

grammarphobia.com

In reality, as long as the zaibatsu kept the factories running, the rail lines expanding, and the shipyards operating at capacity, the men in Tokyo didn’t trouble themselves too much with the details.

The Forgotten Mistake That Killed Japan's Software Industry - Disrupting Japan

disruptingjapan.com

Demian's cover was designed by its famous qoutes; The bird struggles out of the egg. The egg is the world. Who would be born must first destroy a world. The bird then flies to God. That God's name is Abraxas.

JHUNLEE.kr - Hermann Hesse Series: Book Cover Redesign

jhunlee.kr

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