User blog comment:ShalinP/Spelling rules for þ and ð?/@comment-31440310-20181013235628

While most brook "þ" for a soft "th" and "ð" for a hard "th", old germanic tongues never thought of those two loudes as different from each other, so while having those two staves would be more easy to understand, what would be more likely is that a modern Anglish would likely brook only one of them to mean both sounds. It all depends on whether you want to have a more naturally evolved, true-to-historty tongue for Anglish or one that is easier to understand, in practice also including a kind of spelling reform into Anglish beyond just "what if 1066 never happened?". I am more historically minded in my own quest for Anglish, though you can be more practically minded and choose to brook both or to not wend spelling at all. If we are to standardize Anglish, it would be necessary to bring in a large samming of Anglishmen and women to come in and vote on different aspects of Anglish. Only then can we decide on what is truly right or wrong in our tongue.