{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "[ID: youtube comment from Hal Sawyer:\nMy favorite relic English still used everywhere is the word \"the\" used in phrases like:...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/702412720015917056/", "html": "<p><a class=\"tumblr_blog\" href=\"https://www.tumblr.com/blog/view/earhartsease/700843254415081472\" target=\"_blank\">earhartsease</a>:</p><blockquote><div class=\"npf_row\"><figure class=\"tmblr-full\" data-orig-height=\"979\" data-orig-width=\"630\"><img src=\"/media/a2f8ac5f6c60aa36907b3b5c30b04c58fbff3308_55cbe44d9f38.jpg\" data-orig-height=\"979\" data-orig-width=\"630\" srcset=\"/media/758c3335ae569a45c91893db31402e1eb3e6574f_a079491f62cc.jpg 75w, /media/c6d691b97d51fc45498ded5b033c0cbd19e3a1c8_2bc03703e601.jpg 100w, /media/d65ab5d083545aee9f845c129fce5c24ec24fb8f_628457550067.jpg 250w, /media/0cba1080b36d4b73c34da25df36b9fd118b1d920_da470b6a5276.jpg 386w, /media/375b0f1cbc75f337a3c3c0533fdd94fd63ac6ded_98cc6cd808db.jpg 483w, /media/1064193cef5e6bf9f88346ccc1714b5ebaa14cfb_4e9d53365365.jpg 521w, /media/a2f8ac5f6c60aa36907b3b5c30b04c58fbff3308_55cbe44d9f38.jpg 618w, /media/29d0829b68b208ffb97c280b95f24db7faf93e3e_af17563495f9.jpg 630w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 630px) 100vw, 630px\"/></figure></div><p>[ID: youtube comment from Hal Sawyer:</p><p>My favorite relic English still used everywhere is the word &ldquo;the&rdquo; used in phrases like: &ldquo;the more I look at this, the stranger it seems, or &quot;the bigger they come, the harder they fall&rdquo;. This &ldquo;the&rdquo; is not the article of any noun, it is a different word, a conjunction descended from the old English &ldquo;\u00fe\u0101&rdquo;, pronounced &ldquo;tha&rdquo; which means either &ldquo;when&rdquo; or &ldquo;then&rdquo;. Back in early Middle English the structure &ldquo;if - then&rdquo; had not taken over and if you wanted to express an if - then relationship you said &ldquo;\u00fe\u0101 whatever, \u00fe\u0101 whatever&rdquo;, meaning &ldquo;when such-and- such, then such-and-such&rdquo;. &ldquo;\u00fe\u0101&rdquo; sounds almost the same as &ldquo;the&rdquo; and the spelling of the two converged, but the meaning remained totally different. &ldquo;the more, the merrier&rdquo; literally means &ldquo;when more, then merrier&rdquo; or &ldquo;if more, then merrier&rsquo;; same as centuries ago.</p><p>end ID]</p><p>this is so cool </p></blockquote>", "thumbnail_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/media/a2f8ac5f6c60aa36907b3b5c30b04c58fbff3308_55cbe44d9f38.jpg", "thumbnail_width": 618, "thumbnail_height": 960}