erm, it’s “jumps” over the lazy dog, not “jumped”.
That makes more sense as the phrase posted on the original image is missing an S
To add some pedantry i also say “quick fox” & “lazy brown dog” as i associate foxes as being orange.
“Zażółć gęślą jaźń” uses all the diacritics in Polish and was used to test code pages.
“Yellow the goose self”?
I think my translator is hallucinating again
Edit: and if not, that’s a dope metalcore band name
You translator might be correct considering that in hungarian we have “Árvíztűrő tükörfúrógép”, meaning “Flood-proof mirror-drill-machine”
I don’t think the intention of that sentence was anything else than testing the letters and it wasn’t really supposed to have any serious meaning.
How in touch are you with your gooseself?
ů̶͎̱̍̉̄͆ ̸̨̎̃̈́͐́͗̍̊͗̓͛́̕ẅ̸̰̯̗͔́͘0̴̡̯̹̉́̽̊t̸̗͓͓͇̭͖̩̭̪̲͓̖͕̳͈́̌͐͌̅̉́̉́̀͊̑͘͝ ̸̡̛͍͋͊̃̎͌͛̐̃̋͑̚͘̚͝m̵̧̧͚̘̻̰̗̜̺͔͐̍̇̏̽̀͘ͅ8̶͈̣̻̰͎̺̺͎̓͜
this whole exercise is really meant to exist in schools. like, schools for young kids.
we’re adults arguing about which nursery rhyme is cooler while forgetting that this isn’t for us. it needs to be easily understood by children. that’s why we use one with only short easy words.
even the sentence structure of the second one is complicated and hard for a child to remember.
i thought it was made to test typewriters.
looked it up,
it was made to help teachers teach students how to type on keyboards. my bad
Fair, though it’s also used to show off fonts, and I’ll use that second one from now on.
I used this to test my code
It’s easier to remember?
I mean, I’m not going to discount the cool factor of the alternative, but I already forget what it is. Meanwhile the quick brown fox has been stuck in my head for years after only hearing of it a couple of times at most.
Not me. I can never remember it. Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow feels like a declaration a wizard would make with his dying breath. I don’t think I’ll forget it soon.
It’s easier to remember?
Because you’ve seen it repeatedly over years and years of time
Meanwhile the quick brown fox has been stuck in my head for years after only hearing of it a couple of times at most.
Either you never had to take typing, never had to change your font, or just weren’t very observant. I’ve seen that phrase hundreds of times over the decades. Hell, I remember having to type the stupid phrase repeatedly in typing class back in the day.
‘Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow’ is much cooler and more memorable, just from one read.
I took typing in highschool. We did exercises about the letters and their placement in a QWERTY layout. “Quick ask Zoe, why stop X-rays, even dogs can’t…” Fucking lodged in my brain still, even over two decades later.
That’s right. I’ve been using computers since the early 90’s. I’m old. I predate this phrase being popular. It still only took a couple of times seeing it, for it to be permanently lodged in my brain, just like asking Zoe quickly.
I said that phrase and summoned a Gothic Demon
Hi, it’s me, your Gothic Demon
So just for posterity how many times do I have to say it before it works?
I tried 666 times and still didnt work. Very sad day.
🤣😏🤘🏾
I tried this, Odin is throwing rocks at me now. If I try to kill him do I go to Valhalla or Hel?
Leads to cooler art too
qwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnm is my favorite word
“Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.”
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
Well, jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz. So there.
My sphinx of black quartz brings all the jackdaws to the yard
And they’re like, it’s better than your’s
great
oh…
One letter shorter (28) and you’ve got “Waltz, bad nymph, for quick jigs vex!” I prefer that to the 27 letter “Quick nymph bugs vex fjord waltz.”
And the only couple perfect pangrams listed are “Mr. Jock, TV quiz PhD, bags few lynx.” or “Cwm fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz” (which even given the obscure words seems like it’s missing an article before quiz).
The hungry purple dinosaur ate the kind, zingy fox, the jabbering crab, and the mad whale and started vending and quacking.
You missed an S
It doesn’t have the same flow.
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