Can you read this?

What do you think about this 'phenomenon'?

  • It's alright, what's so special about it?

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    18

JadeOHayes

Site Founder
Is spelling bee contest really still relevant after you read this article?
It is 'debatable', of course ... :rolleyes:. For one thing, we would not be able to communicate if an order had not been established to begin with. And for another thing, some people are 'nerds' about it; "the spelling Nazi".​
I am pro presenting things in the correct way (from me to others), regardless I could read/understand things that are not presented properly (from others to me). :peace:​
Still, this phenomenon is pretty amazing!​

Can you read this.jpg
 
Ahh... Explains why I am the master at decoding even the most convoluted typos. I was able to read this perfectly - interesting! ;)

And I read it as fast as I read 'normal' spelling ... :cool: I wonder if it works for any language, I guess since I am multi ... I have a feeling it might not; depending on how familiar we are with the language/how frequent we use it? So there is a little variable there.
 
Lol... notice whoever made this didn't do 'can' right - it would have to be spelled completely normal following their rule, but instead they wrote cna...
 
Lol... notice whoever made this didn't do 'can' right - it would have to be spelled completely normal following their rule, but instead they wrote cna...

Aww, in this case, don't be over-corrective ... those 3-letter words, don't really have any option, do they? Either stay like they are ("the", "are", "but", "was", etc), or are altered slightly (not a lot of combinations either). But you get the idea, the rest of the words - the long ones - are the ones that usually trip readers.
 
I've seen this around for a while, and always liked it. It just goes to show how complex the human mind is. It can take complete non-sense and turn it into an a complete piece of writing.
 
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