Typing umlauts – an easy solution

  • Removed user
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    72625 posts
    12 January 2018 at 0:51:43 #814013

    Hello to those wanting to use umlauts or French accents!

    I have created a simple document using character map which I keep open when I am corresponding with contacts in Switzerland from which I simply copy and paste what I need as I go along.

    It is in Arial as that is my default font but can obviously be converted to another preferred font.

    I am attaching it in case anyone wants to use it.

    Maggie

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    rockoyster
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    8889 posts
    12 January 2018 at 2:27:44 #874145

    Grüezi Maggie,

    Very helpful.

    I now have my straße in order. 🤓

    rockoyster
    Participant
    8889 posts
    12 January 2018 at 3:02:14 #874146

    Grüezi Arno,

    Any chance of including ‘ß’ in your “insert special characters’ tool?

    Removed user
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    72625 posts
    12 January 2018 at 4:59:31 #874147

    >> Any chance of including ‘ß’ in your “insert special characters’ tool?

    The ß character is not used in Switzerland 🙂 They use ss instead.

    Alpenrose.

    Removed user
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    72625 posts
    12 January 2018 at 5:14:46 #874148

    >> I now have my straße in order.

    That would be Straße 😉 All nouns in German are capitalised 🙂 Looks very strange to an English-speaker at first, but at least it makes the nouns easy to spot when you are first learning!

    Alpenrose

    rockoyster
    Participant
    8889 posts
    12 January 2018 at 5:40:26 #874149

    Doh! I am now embarrassed on two (more) counts. 😖

    Removed user
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    12 January 2018 at 6:03:21 #874150

    >> I am now embarrassed on two (more) counts

    No need to be! Only people who know German would know about the capitalisation of nouns (and it takes a while to remember to write them with capitals when you are first learning, even after you know).

    And even a lot of people who have learnt German wouldn’t know about the Swiss use of ss instead of ß.

    If you are wondering why the Swiss don’t use ß, you might find this article interesting:

    Switzerland and Liechtenstein

    The ‘ß’ character was gradually abolished in Switzerland and Liechtenstein from the 1930s onwards, and has now been completely replaced by ‘ss’. It has been suggested that the increasing usage of typewriters has been a cause of the disappearance of ‘ß’. As Swiss typewriters could be used by the country’s German, French, Italian and Rumantsch speakers, keyboard space was limited if keys for all of the accented characters used in these languages were to be included and there was no room for a ‘ß’ key. After the Neue Zürcher Zeitung became the last Swiss German newspaper to stop using ‘ß’ in 1974, the character now only appears in a few publications that are aimed at the German-speaking market as a whole rather than at the domestic Swiss market.

    joycep.myweb.port.ac.u k/abinitio/alphabet/um lautsz.html

    Alpenrose

    rockoyster
    Participant
    8889 posts
    12 January 2018 at 6:35:16 #874151

    Hi Alpenrose,

    That is very interesting.

    The Swiss migration to ss was news to me. I should have known about capitalised nouns though. I did German at school. But is was only for one year as a 3rd language after English and Afrikaans. It was in 1963 or thereabouts so I guess I can be excused. 🤓

    Removed user
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    72625 posts
    13 January 2018 at 20:59:52 #874152

    Hi Rockoyster and Alpenrose

    Thanks for your comments! I did know the Swiss use “ss” not ß but forgot to remove it before posting the document which I also use for other purposes. Sorry if I caused confusion!

    I also learned German at school from ’59 to ’62 but didn’t use it much until I started travelling in 2001 by which time I had to learn a whole new set of vocabulary! My school German had been slanted towards Literature and having read Schiller, Goethe etc was not much help when it came to buying food, checking out trains etc.! The grammar had stuck which meant once I learned the new vocabulary, I at least knew how to use it. The use of capital letters for nouns is actually a useful way for learners to find the nouns in a long complicated sentence, I agree. Not much help when you are talking though!

    Maggie

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    72625 posts
    16 January 2018 at 1:28:57 #874153

    Yes, I find that capitalizing the nouns makes them easier to go back to, once you finally located the verb at the end of a 12 line sentence. 😉

    Slowpoke
    Participant
    7567 posts
    16 January 2018 at 2:42:35 #874154

    <<“Yes, I find that capitalizing the nouns makes them easier to go back to, once you finally located the verb at the end of a 12 line sentence. ;-)”>>

    Keeps the brain agile, trying to fit a 12 line sentence into 140 character tweet, and still keep all the verbs at the end. Tough!

    Of course, there are some who prefer an agile brain over short tweets…

    Slowpoke

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    16 January 2018 at 3:59:25 #874155

    >> Yes, I find that capitalizing the nouns makes them easier to go back to, once you finally located the verb at the end of a 12 line sentence. 😉

    😀

    Spot on! You are probably familiar with Mark Twain’s hilarious take on the German language, in Appendix D of A Tramp Abroad!

    Alpenrose

    Removed user
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    72625 posts
    16 January 2018 at 4:30:42 #874156

    Yes, indeed. Even almost 140 years later, it is still one of the funniest linguistic takedowns ever written.

    The fourth of his eight suggested ways to improve the German language was to “move the Verb further up to the front… to a position where it may be easily seen with the naked eye.”

    And related to that is Suggestion Six– “I would require a speaker to stop when he is done, and not hang a string of those useless “haven sind gewesen gehapt haben geworden seins” to the end of his oration.”

    Wonderful stuff.

    rockoyster
    Participant
    8889 posts
    16 January 2018 at 5:45:33 #874157

    And for those who’s Interest has been spiked . . . http://www.gutenberg.org/file s/119/119-h/119-h.htm#Appendix_D

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