Actually,
most of us have decided on a mixture of old and new. The kids who grew up with the new system follow it, tho' the ß is making a big comeback with the younger generation for some reason. Fine with me, I like having a special symbol.
Die Zeit objected for the best possible reason. Nobody asked their opinion and they consider themselves to be "the" predominate fountain of German thought, reason, poetry and philosphy.
Just ask them.
Did the Rechtschreibreform actually make things easier? My feeling is that it really cleaned up punctuation, reduced "Schachtelsätze" and simplified spelling in word families.
It did, however, introduce some absurd, stupid, laughable and totally illogical adjectival and adverbial forms which, rightly, have been rejected and will no doubt be cast out at the next conclave.
My university demands our students write exclusively in the new form of High German, American English or Latin.
Period.
I still use the old form to write emails to an especially anal-retentive nasty young-dynamic-manager in the administration who then sends back a note demanding I conform to the regulations. Since we have to correspond 30-40 times a semester, it gives me great satisfaction to post his replies on the bulletin board in the Germanistic department. They then mark up his errors and send them on to other departments.
Es lebe der "ß"!
most of us have decided on a mixture of old and new. The kids who grew up with the new system follow it, tho' the ß is making a big comeback with the younger generation for some reason. Fine with me, I like having a special symbol.
Die Zeit objected for the best possible reason. Nobody asked their opinion and they consider themselves to be "the" predominate fountain of German thought, reason, poetry and philosphy.
Just ask them.
Did the Rechtschreibreform actually make things easier? My feeling is that it really cleaned up punctuation, reduced "Schachtelsätze" and simplified spelling in word families.
It did, however, introduce some absurd, stupid, laughable and totally illogical adjectival and adverbial forms which, rightly, have been rejected and will no doubt be cast out at the next conclave.
My university demands our students write exclusively in the new form of High German, American English or Latin.
Period.
I still use the old form to write emails to an especially anal-retentive nasty young-dynamic-manager in the administration who then sends back a note demanding I conform to the regulations. Since we have to correspond 30-40 times a semester, it gives me great satisfaction to post his replies on the bulletin board in the Germanistic department. They then mark up his errors and send them on to other departments.
Es lebe der "ß"!