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Wikipedia:Language recognition chart - Wikipedia Since the inherent vowel is assumed and not written, most letters' names look identical to the letter itself (the name of the letter ঘ is itself ghô, not gh)
The History Of The Umlaut And The Diaeresis - Babbel. com What the heck are those mysterious dots hovering over words in the language you are learning? Don’t be alarmed — those funny little diacritic marks are umlauts (or diaereses), and they’re here to help
Diacritics and special characters by language | Yale University Library These are diacritics and special characters in languages encountered in music cataloging at Yale, as mapped for Orbis (Voyager) Not all diacritics are included, namely those for languages in which we do not catalog For a complete list, see Diacritics and special characters from Cataloging at Yale
Special characters (diacritics) used in European languages The map shows a list of special characters used for each national European language (regional and minority languages are not included because there are simply too many — they would not fit into the map)
Diacritics : Miscellaneous - University of Sussex Diacritics, often loosely called `accents', are the various little dots and squiggles which, in many languages, are written above, below or on top of certain letters of the alphabet to indicate something about their pronunciation
Spot the Dot: Accents and Diacritics | Unlock the Language Clues Identifying languages by their special letters Maybe you have all family letters, postcards, passports, books- but you don’t know what language they are in What’s a quick-and-easy way to find out? Well, there are several ways
Diaresis, tréma, Umlaut. Which is it? | The Language Closet Normally represented by two dots above the letter where the sound is modified, or some other things, we also find a similar-looking sort of diacritic used in languages like German, Swedish, and Finnish
Diacritics: Why Some Words Keep Their Accent Marks Those little extras above (or sometimes below) letters are called diacritical marks, or diacritics for short You can think of them as the accessories of the alphabet world — they’re not part of the basic letter, but they add a little something extra to tell us how to pronounce or understand a word
Dot (diacritic) - Wikipedia When used as a diacritic mark, the term dot primarily refers to the glyphs "combining dot above" ( ̇), and "combining dot below" ( ̣) which may be combined with some letters of the extended Latin alphabets in use in a variety of languages Similar marks are used with other scripts