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The word “The” is the most commonly-used letter of the English language; it makes 80% of an appearance in all written paragraphs
To recognize its usage and usefulness, Melbourne-based Australian restaurateur Paul Mathis has created a new symbol as a short-formed substitute for “the”.
The “the” symbol looks like what happens when an uppercase “T” conjoins with a lowercase “h”: ‘Ћ’.
Like an ampersand (&) for “and”, Ћ hopes to save “penstrokes”, “keystrokes” and “space”; make tweeting and texting more efficient; and be “next step in communication evolution”.
According to newspapers, Mathis has invested over US$60,000 to develop the Ћ symbol.
He’s also created a range of mobile phone keyboards, the ‘THE Keyboard’, with the most expensive in the range featuring shortcuts for 14 most-used words in the English language.
“The word ‘and’ is only the fifth-most used word in English and it has its own symbol—the ampersand,” Mathis told The Age. “Isn’t it time we accorded the same respect to ‘the’?”
Does the word “the” really warrant its own letter in the alphabet?


[via Herald Sun, iamge via Sydney Morning Herald / Luis Enrique Ascui]

The word “The” is the most commonly-used letter of the English language; it makes 80% of an appearance in all written paragraphs
To recognize its usage and usefulness, Melbourne-based Australian restaurateur Paul Mathis has created a new symbol as a short-formed substitute for “the”.
The “the” symbol looks like what happens when an uppercase “T” conjoins with a lowercase “h”: ‘Ћ’.
Like an ampersand (&) for “and”, Ћ hopes to save “penstrokes”, “keystrokes” and “space”; make tweeting and texting more efficient; and be “next step in communication evolution”.
According to newspapers, Mathis has invested over US$60,000 to develop the Ћ symbol.
He’s also created a range of mobile phone keyboards, the ‘THE Keyboard’, with the most expensive in the range featuring shortcuts for 14 most-used words in the English language.
“The word ‘and’ is only the fifth-most used word in English and it has its own symbol—the ampersand,” Mathis told The Age. “Isn’t it time we accorded the same respect to ‘the’?”
Does the word “the” really warrant its own letter in the alphabet?


[via Herald Sun, iamge via Sydney Morning Herald / Luis Enrique Ascui]