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I would like to see a source for this claim, which strikes me as highly unlikely:
AFAIK, the purpose of the International Phonetic Alphabet is make it possible to provide a phonetic transcription of every spoken language, but I have never heard that the International Phonetic Association intended this to replace any language's common orthography or that it "asks that we do away with all the alphabets [sic; perhaps you mean writing systems?] across the globe". -- Angr ( t· c) 00:41, 3 December 2005 (UTC)
Under "Simplification" changed "Spanish (in the XVIII century)" to "Spanish (in the 18th century)"
I have added a link form there to the 'Language reform' article. There are interesting intersections. When I have to remove parts form the 'Language purification' (also called 'Debabling') article, please let me now. I think currently the two articles have a good fit, the reform article has a more academic point of view, the purification article is primary practically oriented. Thanks, Iwanjka (can be reached as well at [email protected]). Would be great to have a one to one discussion on this topic, contact me, if you are interested as well (email). Iwanjka ( talk) 22:50, 2 September 2008 (UTC)
Most reforms listed in the "example" section are in fact spelling reforms that didn't touch the respective languages. I propose to remove these and add a few sentences in the lead section about the distinction between language and spelling reform, so that this article is only about language reform proper. I think this is justified, because we already have a separate article about spelling reform. -- Schuetzm ( talk) 18:17, 18 April 2010 (UTC)
I am surprised that the intro restricts the simplification wording to grammar and vocabulary where English language reforms almost always are about spelling reforms, for instance. -- Pierrejcd —Preceding undated comment added 02:05, 26 November 2012 (UTC)
A spelling reform can touch a language in a very major way: how a language is read and how it is written. Therefore, I have added the word spelling in the introduction because spelling or orthography is an integral part of a language in the same way that its vocabulary and its grammar are. A spelling system (orthography) is an integral part of a language, which a language depends on to visually represent words and allow a language to be read (decoded) accurately. Pierrejcd ( talk) 08:48, 28 May 2014 (UTC)
The section "simplification" contains an explicit reference to examples of [Newspeak] from George Orwell's 1984, such as "ungood" as a replacement for "bad." 1984 is the story of a nightmarish totalitarian dystopia, so conflating a real-life phenomenon like language reform with Orwell's novel will give it undeservedly negative connotations. There are numerous historical examples of language reform that shouldn't be colored by association with Newspeak. At the very least, if not rewritten then this section should at least contain a citation to Orwell or 1984.18:26, 10 April 2015 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 96.33.227.245 ( talk)
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