English just has to decide on a sensible orthography. The grammar is fine. For a complete inventory of this mess,
go here.
spoiler (click to show/hide)
And lookit that beautifully bare HTML. /sniff It was a simpler time. T_T
- Anglicise all loan words, because you shouldn't have to learn a different language to 'correctly' pronounce your own vocab. This is not unique to English, but you have a pretty bad case of the hoity-toities.
- Un-fuck your vowels. Eye, aye, I, italian. Madness. Vowel shift the fuck back or adapt the spelling. This is particularly bad in English and the reason you're doomed to fuck up most foreign words anyway. See above.
- Shrink consonant clusters to one letter and ditch everything you don't actually pronounce. Knight has three sounds, but twice as many letters.
tl;dc Make like Spanish and actually use the alphabet the away it's supposed to, phonetically.
I guess it made sense to be more specific when society and life was less dynamic
Yup. Native languages in South Africa and Australia can be awfully complicated, from grammar to number of distinct sounds. Something about your life and environment staying the same over milennia seems to make languages grow more and more complicated. Either that, or small population sizes. Or both.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taa_language#PhonologyTaa has at least 58 consonants, 31 vowels, and four tones (Traill 1985, 1994 on East ǃXoon), or at least 87 consonants, 20 vowels, and two tones (DoBeS 2008 on West ǃXoon), by many counts the most of any known language. These include 20 (Traill) or 43 (DoBeS) click consonants and several vowel phonations, though opinions vary as to which of the 130 (Traill) or 164 (DoBeS) consonant sounds are single segments and which are consonant clusters.