(from 2018-07-27) > Michael Everson responded, > >>> If members of the Georgian user community want to consider this a stylistic >>> difference, they are free to do so. >> >> It isn’t a stylistic difference. It is a different use of capital letters >> than Latin, Cyrillic and other scripts use them.
suppose that english was written with a bicameral script, but english users only used the upper case letters for emphasis. in other words, personal names (like bela lugosi), place names (like bechuanaland), and book titles (like "the bridge over the river kwai") would always be in lower case. if someone needed to emphasize something by SHOUTING, they would use all-caps to make this stylistic distinction. if english users called upper case "harcourt" and lower case "fenton", there would be no earthly reason for them to consider switching from fenton to harcourt to be anything other than a stylistic difference. along comes a consortium with script experts and computer encoding experts who rightfully determine that the difference between harcourt and fenton is actually a casing difference, even though the english writing system does not actually use casing in a manner consistent with other bicameral scripts. so the consortium, tasked with breaking down elements of text for computer entry, exchange, and storage, encodes the english script as a casing script. would that action by the consortium alter my perception (as a typical member of the english user community) that the difference between harcourt and fenton is simply stylistic? HECK, no! the same applies to georgian. or any script. whatever the consortium does for computer text processing purposes should NEVER be interpreted as an effort to make the users change their perceptions of their OWN writing systems. we've been through this kind of thing before, with tamil as a notorious example. best regards, james kass