Goodbye, Dan rank!

@COArSe_D1RTxxx My guess is: In many languages which use the Latin alphabet, 'c' and 'ch' can be pronounced the same. I guess that Tracy-Reznik just isn't familiar at times when to use which letter or letter compound, because English spelling is mostly arbitrary.

> In many languages which use the Latin alphabet, 'c' and 'ch' can be pronounced the same.

Well, no…

> I guess that Tracy-Reznik just isn't familiar at times when to use which letter or letter compound, because English spelling is mostly arbitrary.

“Ch” in those languages you were referring to is pronounced like [k], but I'm talking about the “che” at the end of “chorrespondenche”. The last C in “correspondence” is pronounced like [s], so it wouldn't make sense for it to be spelt with “ch”. You could say that perhaps they don't know how the word is pronounced because they've only seen written English, but if they've only seen written English, there would be no reason to mistake “c” and “ch”.

Hmm, maybe he's from a parallel universe where his spelling might be considered correct? I mean, that would be hilarious, ha ha. :D

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