It would be far more consistent with the pronunciation of other similar words.
I’m more partial to an entirely new alphabet,
F/f - For
U/u - Oopse
U̇/u̇ - Up
Uṙ/uṙ - Nurse
Uı/uı - I
UE/ᵫ - Book
Þ/þ - Thanks
Ð/ð - The
O/o - Oh
Ȯ/ȯ - On
Ou/ou - Out
Ouṙ/ouṙ - our
Oṙ/oṙ - Or
Oı/oı - Oil
Œ/œ - “Oh” isolate
Œṙ/œṙ - “oer the ramparts we watched”
Œı/œı - owing vs boing
Ṙ/ṙ - Earth
R/r - Read
K/k - Court
C/c - She
Q/q - Quick
G/g - Go
Gq/gq - Gwen
Gx/gx - Ghurfa
V/v - Of
W/w - With
H/h - He
X/x - loch
N/n - Negation
Ny/ny - ñapa
I/ı - Eat
Iṙ/ıṙ - Ear
Y/y - You
İ/i- In
P/p - Park
S/ſ - So
Z/z - Is
T/t - To
Tc/tc - Check
B/b - Be
E/e - Elder
Ė/ė - A
Eı/eı - Acre
Eıṙ/eıṙ - Air
M/m - Me
L/l - Like
Ŋ/ŋ - Ring
D/d - Do
Dj/dj - Jacket
A/a - All
Au/au - Awe
Aṙ/aṙ - Are
Aı/aı - Sky
Aıṙ/aıṙ - Ire
Æ/æ - And
J/j - Genre
Eklızıæstiku̇ſ, 34:18-21
Humevṙ givz æz tceıritı, gᵫdz ðeı hæv teıkin buı foṙſ oṙ buı diſȯniſtı, ðeıṙ doneıcėnz aṙ ȯbſın; ðeıṙ giftſ aṙ ė ceımfėl mȯkṙı v djenṙȯſitı. Benevolenſ diteſtſ tceıritı givin buı blu̇dı hændz; no ėmount n'oṙ vælyu given buı ſu̇tc ſṙvz t ėpız ð huıeſt. Humevṙ teıkſ wėt litėl filz ð ſtoṙz v ð diſfoṙtcund, ðei d ð ſeım æz wu̇n hu mṙdṙz ð tcuıld bifoṙ ðeıṙ peırent'ſ uız. Đ fᵫd v ð disfoṙtcund z ðeıṙ luıfblu̇d, ænd humevṙ difrȯdz ðem v it, ðeıṙ hændz aŗ ſteınd red; al ð seim æz eni mṙdṙṙ oṙ brut v difrint mınz.
Levitiku̇ſ, 19:33-34
Wen ė forinṙ livz ėmėŋgſt Y, i yoṙ kėntcrı, dn miſtcrıt ðem. Ðiſ pṙſėn livıŋ ėmėŋgſt Y mu̇ſt bı tcrıtėd æz yoṙ on. Lu̇v æ d u̇ntu yoṙ neıbṙ æz Y wᵫd yoṙſelf.
R fully becomes a semi vowel same as U to W or I to Y, several grammar words get Shavian style abbreviations for brevity, and where french has accents, spanish has the ñ, and german has umlauts, the expanded english vowels have single dots the way lower case i already does.
Went through the whole thing expecting to speak German, was very disappointed.
I mean English is a germanic language, not too surprising how german phonemic spelling would look considering how much of our fucked up current system is owed to trying to make loan words consistent with their language of origin.
That… That is glorious.