The letter "Ä, ä" is spoken just like the a in the word "Mac".
The name "Zoë" with two dots above the "e" is pronounced as "Zoh-ee" with a long "o" sound and emphasis on the second syllable.
Two dots above a vowel typically indicate that the vowel should be pronounced as a separate syllable or with a different sound. This diacritic mark is known as a diaeresis or umlaut, and it is commonly used in various languages such as German and Hungarian.
The two dots above a letter, you mean, would be called a diaeresis and/or an umlaut.
There is two dots above the Mn, there your two S dots
The two dots above the "e" in Brontë are called a diaeresis. It is used to indicate that the "e" is pronounced separately from the preceding vowel. It is a diacritic mark that helps with the correct pronunciation and emphasis of the name.
The letter with two dots is called an umlaut and is pronounced by adding a "y" sound before the vowel. For example, "ü" is pronounced like "ue" in German.
The letter ö makes an ugh sound like the word höngenous
The two dots over the letter E in Noel indicate that it should be pronounced as two separate syllables. This diacritic mark is called a diaeresis and is used to show that the vowels are to be pronounced individually rather than as a digraph.
It depends on what langauge you are talking about. If you mean German: ä: pronounce it like the "a" in ham ö: pronounce it like the "ur" in murder ü: has no equivalent in English but can be described as pronouncing the sound ee with rounded lips. If you mean Russian: ё: pronounced like "yo" or "oh" If you mean French: vowels with two dots above them do not change in pronunciation. The dots just mean that the vowel is separate from the previous vowel, such as naïve.
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A diaeresis is normally located above the second of two adjacent vowels. It indicates that the two sounds are to be pronounced separately, rather than as a diphthong. For example, 'naïve'.
A "y" with two dots above it, known as "ÿ," is called a diaeresis or umlaut. In languages like French and German, it can indicate that the vowel is pronounced separately from the preceding vowel, affecting the word's pronunciation. In some contexts, it can also appear in transliterations or specific names.