- Macrons (ā, ē, ī, ō, ū) | WordReference Forums
Hi how would you translate the word "macron" into French? A macron is a long above vowels If you have Latin in school, maybe you know the word Rōmānus Rōmāna (means in French: Romain[e]) And you'll find it in Latvian place names, such as Liepāja, Jūrmala etc You can also use macrons in
- macrons breves - WordReference Forums
Macrons are great I usually try to use methods and read texts that use them I know they aren't required but, for instance, though I had the instinct that the first vowel in fēmina was stressed, I would never have thought it was long, and I would have mispronounced it Moreover, the forms that came down into Italian and French are femmina and femme, giving the wrong impression So I
- Macrons, their importance Latin vowel length - WordReference Forums
The conjugation of verbs and declension of nouns does occasionally hinge on the macrons, so to speak For example, the ablative singular in the first declension is differentiated from the nominative solely by vowel length: e g , nom puella - abl puellā
- Typing Macrons Using Alt Codes | WordReference Forums
8) Now you can type macrons Hold down the option key (or alt key on PC keyboards) while typing 'a' Then type the vowel you want to have a macron over it The vowel will now magically appear with a macron over it And, by the way, as far as I know, you can just stay in the "U S Extended" input mode all the time
- Okasan, obachan, and ojichan | WordReference Forums
I've only seen macrons ( ̄) used to indicate long vowels It's also quite common to use a double vowel, especially for A, U, and I (oo and ee are a bit different because for English speakers who don't know anything about Japanese, they would be pronounced as う and い)
- Latin: Go big or go home - WordReference Forums
Are you sure the idiom "go big" would be literally translated as "i magno"?And why "magno" (dative) and not "magnus"? Furthermore, you don't need macrons in Latin, unless you want to demonstrate pronunciation for learners
- Ipsos mori - WordReference Forums
A new company has been formed through the mergerof two large market research companies in the UK Ipsos and MORI These are both abbreviations, but I wondered if the phrase "Ipsos mori" actually means anything in Latin - or indeed any other language
- Homer: . . . aien aristeuein. . . ? | WordReference Forums
Haha, now if you can find me a keyboard that will type the macrons for Latin text, I will be complete! ( I haven't tried really hard to find these things, and so have been remiss myself) If you are using Windows, try the Canadian Multilingual Standard keyboard driver, included in Windows for quite a few years now
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