[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] German Umlaut Vowels
Christopher Menke
menke5616 at sbcglobal.net
Sun Apr 23 20:44:27 PDT 2006
All,
Or you can hold down the "Alt" tab and at the same time type 129 or 132.
alt 129 = ü alt 132 = ä
Chris Menke
Allan Zelmer <alzee at mts.net> wrote:
Hello Otto and listers;
There is no need to type, for example, ae in order to indicate an umlaut A.
I recommend you go to the following website address:
http://helpdesk.rootsweb.com/codes/vowels.html
You will find a page entitled "Character Codes" "Umlauted vowels and
symbols".
Print out that page and save it and you will then be able to compile text
using, for example ä etc, with ease.
Allan Zelmer.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Otto"
To: "S G G E E"
Sent: Sunday, April 23, 2006 10:02 AM
Subject: [Ger-Poland-Volhynia] German Umlaut Vowels
>A brief note:
>
> The German alphabet includes three umlaut vowels, A, O, and U.
> (vowels with two dots above them) The dots are not diacritical
> marks. Umlaut vowels are alphabetical characters. Umlauts are to be
> pronounced at the front of the mouth like the pronunciation of 'ich'
> and not at the throaty back of the mouth like pronunciation of 'ach'.
> Umlaut/half-loud. Author Mark Twain joked that learning German is
> getting the ichlauts and achlauts correct, say what you are going to
> say, then add a verb to the end.
>
> Mechanical typewriters came on to the world scene. 26 letters. . .
> where are my umlaut vowels?
> The ListServ is not umlaut capable. What do I do now?
> I indicate an umlaut A by adding an E after it, resulting in "ae', I
> do the same with umlaut O="oe" and umlaut U="ue"
> (you will note the added 'e' forces the vowel sounding to the front
> of the mouth)
>
> Today, more and more font bases include diacritical marks AND German
> umlaut vowels.
>
>
> . . . Otto
>
> " The Zen moment..." wk. of March 5, 2006
> ________________________________
> "Remove what isn't... What is remains."
>
>
>
>
>
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