Yeah, Polish rules when it comes to pronunciation

. Just every letter has its 1 sound and there's no problem to read every new word

. Well, maybe with some rules of course (for example, "Ś" is pronounced by "sh" in English, "s" is pronounced the same as English "s" etc.) and some exceptions but they're very very rare. I must agree that English words have so messed up reading and sometimes I have no f**king idea why some words are pronounced a lot differently as I supposed.... but on the other hand Polish has so goddamn difficult grammar, probably the most difficult in the entire world

Yes, the English language is very messed up and now that it has expanded so much it's pretty much impossible to fix the errors that were made in the past, unless the big ones were to make changes to a new English dictionary and make it mandatory to everywhere where English is used. So a solution does exist.

The language I first learnt was Portuguese (from Portugal - the original) and Portuguese isn't an easy language neither because of all those accents it needs to be used on the letters and whatnot.
PT:
E = I
É = E
Anywho, how the English letters are pronounced:
A = Ay
B = Bi
C = Ci
D = Di
E = i
F = Ef
G = Gi
H = Hey-tch
I - Yi
J = Jay (or Jei)
K = Kay (or Kei)
L = El
M = Em
N = En
O = Oh
P = Pi
Q = Cu
R = Ar
S = Es
T = Ti
U = U
V = Vi
W = W
X = Ex
Y = Y
Z = Zed (UK) | Zii (US)
If I started writing English with my own style it'd probably be hard for English users to know what this and that'd be.
Btw, English has become my first language and Portuguese my second, then third, Spanish. Despite being Portuguese, I just like our food, weather, woman, beaches, peacefulness, country and lord knows what. lol