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thadk | 6 months ago

Sometimes the original typesetting is helpful to understand these kinds of artifacts: https://archive.org/details/bim_eighteenth-century_rules-for...

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phi-go|6 months ago

This reads like the author has a lisp, with the letter s looking like an f.

kuschku|6 months ago

Fun fact: That long s accidentally lead to a new character being created.

In German, we've got words like "dass". Back in the day, every s that wasn't at the end of a word was written as long s, so "dass" would've been written like "daſs", which got turned into ß.

That's why until the recent orthographic reforms of 1996 and 2006 "dass" was written as "daß".

Aside: in some regions, "dass" would've been written like "dasz" / "daſz". That's why the letter is called Eszett (S-Z) even though it's capitalised as two consecutive "s".