- Conversion table for diacritics (e. g. ü → ue)
I am looking for a table for converting German diacritics into their non-diacritic character combination equivalent For instance that table would indicate that the umlaut ü may be converted to ue)
- How to enter accented characters like ü and ö in Windows?
In Windows, I can't type characters like ü and ö How do I enter these characters on Windows?
- How do I type accented characters like ü and ö in macOS?
In macOS, I can't type characters like ü and ö How to enter these characters in macOS? Appreciate if someone can suggest me how to do this
- 〈ü〉 vs 〈ue〉 in German, particularly names
ü and ue are not 100% equivalent In a computer context where it is difficult to produce "ü" (key missing, combination unknown) it is totally acceptable to replace an "ü" with "ue" in every text because often the Umlaut is still not supported by the underlying system or cannot be entered easily (as the key is missing in your keyboard layout)
- pronunciation - Cant find the difference between o, ö, u, und ü . . .
I think you can continue on in lessons just fine―many German learners can't tell the difference between ö and ü After you know how to the basics of pronouncing at least o and u, and some sound like ö ü, you just need exposure and practice to learn the difference and to say them right
- umlaut - How to write german Um-laut Ä ä Ö ö Ü ü and ß from a non . . .
ö on ; (Ö on shift + ;) ü on [ (Ü on shift + [) ß on - Some punctuation marks and other non-letter characters are now not necessarily where you are used to, but they are rarely used in normal typing Most other operating systems also allow several keyboard layouts to be configured and offer some kind of key combination to switch between them
- windows - Umlaut (ä, ö, ü) on English (US) layout - Super User
Umlaut (ä, ö, ü) on English (US) layout Ask Question Asked 9 years, 1 month ago Modified 7 months ago
- terminology - What is the umbrella term for ä, ö and ü and the little . . .
In English, the sounds like a, e, i, o or u are called vowel sounds I want to know, whether ä, ö, and ü have certain names in German language and what the dots used to produce them are called
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