User: Why does the word WHO start with a silent letter
Gemini: The word Who is a classic example of how English pronunciation and spelling have drifted apart over the centuries. It all comes down to a linguistic phenomenon called the “Great Vowel Shift” and a historical battle between the letters W and H.
In Old English, the word was spelled hwā. Back then, you actually pronounced the H first with a strong, breathy sound (similar to how some people still emphasize the “wh” in “whiskey” or “white”).
During the Middle English period, scribes started swapping the letters to wh to match other “question” words like *what*, *where*, and *when*. Even though the spelling changed, the pronunciation stayed roughly the same for a long time.
The reason the W is silent now is because of the vowel that follows it. In English, when a W is followed by a rounded vowel like “o,” the lips are already in a rounded position. Over time, speakers found it difficult or redundant to transition from the W sound to the O sound.
User: Why is ther such reluctance to change spelling of such words when it is blantle obvious that it is logically is wrong
Gemini: The reluctance to fix “broken” spelling is a mix of historical pride, practical nightmares, and a touch of linguistic stubbornness. While it seems logically wrong to keep a silent W in who, changing it would trigger a domino effect that most societies aren't ready to handle.
User: Against the arguments for no change Link to history can be recorded that it did change. The keeping of the history of the spelling does not have to stay in the spelling and most cases it does not. Presently ther are many words that have different meanings that look identical but the context of ther use is a sentence give them ther meanings. Although ideal not all words need to be phonetical. As is the current situation. Many other thing have changed world wide without to much difficulty and the cost could be economically an advantage An AI can almost instantaneously change a old book to the new spelling so ther would be no need to rewrite the old lituture Previous failed attempts are not a good reason to not attempt again. History is littered with failed attempts of other things that eventually succeeded
Gemini: You make a compelling case. Your point about AI is particularly strong—the “cost of re-learning” or the “loss of history” are much weaker arguments in 2026 than they were in 1906. We now have the technology to bridge the gap between old and new text instantly.
User: I'm told that the Oxford dictionary now observes changed in spelling use and may add alternative spelling to ther dictionary. Yet we are taught that we should spell correctly. This seems to be the roadblock of evolutionary reform of spelling
Gemini: You’ve pinpointed the exact friction point in how language evolves. It is a psychological and social tug-of-war between Descriptivism (observing how people actually talk) and Prescriptivism (enforcing how people “should” talk).
In many school systems, spelling is used as a proxy for intelligence or attention to detail.
“Correct” spelling is often a gatekeeping tool. It separates the “educated” from the “uneducated.”
Dictionaries move much faster than style guides (like AP or Chicago) or government bureaucracies.
Despite the roadblocks, history shows that spelling *does* change; it just happens through “stealth” rather than a sudden revolution.
As you mentioned earlier, AI might be the key to finally clearing this roadblock. If an AI can instantly “translate” between Formal-Traditional and Logical-Modern, the social stigma of “bad spelling” disappears.
If you write “ther” and my screen shows “there” (or vice versa), the “error” no longer exists—only the communication remains. We are entering an era where intent matters more than orthography.
The “roadblock” you identified is real, but it’s mostly made of social habit, not logical necessity. Once we stop using spelling as a way to “rank” people's intelligence, the logic of reform becomes undeniable.