Journal Ethelred Unraed's Journal: The evil bit of the English language 34
Thanks to a brief conversation with gmhowell, it has come to my attention that the English language has a built-in evil bit: the umlaut.
Thus your evil twin's name is spelt with an umlaut. The more umlauts, the more evil he or she is.
Think of things like Mötley Crüe. Really evil. Or worse, Blue Öyster Cult, alias BÖE. Yep, you got it...my wife's evil twin.
If your name lacks a vowel*, you must umlaut a consonant, thus making you so evil that your name cannot be written**, let alone spoken.
Thus the world may face the infamy of Ëthëlrëd Ünräëd in the near future.
...
* - Not bloody likely, but hey.
** - At least not in any usual Net forum. Some restrictions apply. Not valid in a jurisdiction near you. Tithe daily.
does this mean... (Score:2)
Heavy Metal Umlaut (Score:2)
--slöthdög
Re:Heavy Metal Umlaut (Score:2)
I never imagined that someone would actually research this phenomenon...
Though of course the idea of umlauting the consonants isn't that new [bmxweb.com], as Grotus proved. The cute part is that they umlauted [bmxweb.com] all the consonants, but none of the vowels...
Çhëërs,
Éthèlréd
Re:Heavy Metal Umlaut (Score:2)
Americans must think education leads to evil.
Re:Heavy Metal Umlaut (Score:2)
Re:Heavy Metal Umlaut (Score:2)
Re:Heavy Metal Umlaut (Score:2)
And of course there's always Dr. Evil.
Damn. Guess that torpedoes my plans for getting a doctorate.
Cheers,
Ethelred
It's proof I tell ya! (Score:1)
Evil Christmas (Score:2)
We FREEEEEEEENCH do nut hef ze ooom-loud. So we are nut eeee-vill.*
Oui, ça va.
* - Though they do use it on "Noël". Thus is Christmas in France evil, proving once and for all that France is, in fact, Bizarro World.
Cheers,
Ethelred
Hmmm (Score:1)
Ï'm täkïng övër thë wörld.
FËÄR MË!!!111one one!
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
I'm getting a headache.
Which one of you twirls his mustache?
Cheers,
Sir Ethelred-Not-In-This-Film
Re:Hmmm (Score:1)
dengis,
Ëvïl Ëm
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
Purref,
Rguryerq
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
no vowels? (Score:2)
A pedantic note (Score:2)
It's not really an umlaut. An umlaut is a sound shift represented by the sign in many languages, german for instance. But there is no umlaut in English (and in, for instance, danish, an umlauted a is represented with a character that doesn't have the mark.) A better word for the marks would be diaeresis which refers to the mark itself ('the two pricks' as we say here in Sweden) rather than to a sound change it is sometimes but not always used to indicate. Particularly when you're explicitly talking about us
Re:A pedantic note (Score:2)
Thät's thë fünnïëst thïng Ï'vë rëäd tödäy.
I'll see your pedantry and raise you a malaprop (Score:2)
No no no no no. "Dieresis" does not sound sufficiently foreign and Germanic (and thus is not sufficiently evil). "Umlaut" is thus far more appropriate.
The irony being that "umlaut" is not spelt with an umlaut. We shall hereby correct this:
Ümläüt.
Pronounced exactly as spelled. ;-)
Cheers,
Ethelred
Additional irony (Score:2)
But diaeresis does have an umlaut. Diäresis, diæresis... hmm you're right though, it doesn't sound sufficiently evil, even though it does have an umlaut.
I'll have to think about this, it's clearly a complicated issue.
Hmmm. (Score:1)
Re:Hmmm. (Score:2)
You want to be pretty evil? Pretty? You know what song came to mind when I read that...
Pretty and evil don't really seem to go together, but... whatever floats yer boat...
Re:Hmmm. (Score:1)
They don't? Boy, you need to watch some James Bond movies [wikipedia.org]...
Re:Hmmm. (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm. (Score:1)
And besides, aren't squirrels all cute and pretty? You *know* how evil those are! (Just ask Some Woman!)
Re:Hmmm. (Score:1)
Also, are you questioning my sexuality? As far as I know it is mostly a shade of green. Make of that what you will.
Re:Hmmm. (Score:1)
Anyways, greeting from (not very evil, just 3 "umlauts") jäwthëshärk.
On a more serious note... (Score:2)
Some old books still write "coöperation" instead of "co-operation", for example, or "preëmpt" for "pre-empt" or "preempt". This is also the reason for the "ë" in "Charlotte Brontë".
However, like older spellings such as "to-day"
Ülträ Ëvil of Dööm! (Score:2)
Re:Ülträ Ëvil of Dööm! (Score:2)
Bëwärë ... (Score:2)
Sheesh, there must be an easier way than typing ä, ë, ï, ö and ü for ä, ë, ï, ö and ü
Anyway, I know it's gotta be evil when I get spam for vïägrä and crap.
ëvïl ïndëëd, (Score:2)
fprintf(fp, ät line %d\n", line);
Instant syntax error there! Now, once I get used to this, my strings when I write them at the other machines will begin with an extra space I guess -- not good either way.
But at least I found one place I can put this to good use!
hmm... and another thing, if gööd == evil, would ëvïl == good ? Or would it
Does it only count for English Names? (Score:2)
I think it should only count for English names/words, and that it isn't the evil bit, but the dork bit.
The satire of this is DeathTongue, but I don't remember where the umlaut was.
You haven't seen nothing til you've seen (Score:1)
That's 11 ëvïl bïts, for those who are counting, thus keeping the parity odd, an essential piece of maintaining "ëvïlïty", something which the unevil, even paritied Ethelred missed. That's right, his evil twin isn't even evil. It's a sad day, alright. Very sad.