> Andrew Fildes <afildes@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>
> This is wonderful - your messages are coming through with the archaic
> (pre-12 century) forms of 'th' - the soft 'thorn' letter like an
> extended 'p' and I can't remember the name of the hard th as in 'the'
> which looks like a crossed 'd'. Plus of course an f substitute for an
> s in some positions which survived into Renaissance times. How do you
> do that?!!
Yeah, I got them too, but just thought it was my ISP's crap webmail interface
(like the chinese character in cafe).
...Wayne
Wayne Harridge
http://lrh.structuregraphs.com
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