From an English to Spanish website: dieresis (accent on the 1st "e")
Umlauts are pronounced by making the vowel sound shorter and tighter. For example, the German letter "ä" is pronounced similar to the "e" in "bed", while "ö" is similar to the "i" in "bird" and "ü" is similar to the "ee" in "see".
This kind of accent is called an "umlaut".
Edges are called "bordes" in Spanish.
Floats are called "carrozas" in Spanish.
A baby donkey is called "potro" in Spanish.
Umlauts
in German they are called umlauts
There are only three letters with umlauts in German. ä, ü, and ö. Umlauts at the two dots over the letters.
They're not umlauts. They're diacritic marks. They denote which vowel follows the consonant, and can also tell you to nasalize that particular segment of the word.
Bratwurst ("u" has umlauts) meaning saussage
Tschuss (The u in Tschuss has umlauts on it -2 dots on it- )
Umlauts are pronounced by making the vowel sound shorter and tighter. For example, the German letter "ä" is pronounced similar to the "e" in "bed", while "ö" is similar to the "i" in "bird" and "ü" is similar to the "ee" in "see".
You'd need a keyboard with umlauts, or you have to use unicode characters.
This kind of accent is called an "umlaut".
A spanish girl is called chica
German has no umlaut on the letter e. Umlauts however differentiate pronunciations.
Umlauts are diacritical marks that consist of two dots placed over a vowel, such as ä, ö, ü in German. They indicate a sound change in pronunciation, typically making the vowel sound shorter or more fronted. Umlauts are used in languages to denote different sounds or to indicate specific grammatical features like pluralization or verb conjugation.