The letter "U" with two dots above it is known as "U-umlaut" or "U with diaeresis." It is primarily used in languages such as German, Swedish, Finnish, and Estonian to indicate a specific pronunciation of the "U" vowel sound.
No. Dots above letters (such as in Noël, maïs, aigüe) known as the "signe tréma" in French, indicate that the world is pronounced differently (like accents do). The tréma is rather rare in French and many French natives tend to forget it when writing.The tréma in french is used to split a dipthong. A dipthong is when two vowels join together to create one sound. For example, a + i = the "i" sound in "like". But sometimes you may wish to not join the sounds. In the case of Maïs, it is pronounced "Ma-is" as opposed to the English word "Mice". It is important to note that this use of the tréma is a particularly french one. The German use, called the "umlaut" is used for rounding vowels and is the most common application of the two dots.
To add two dots on top of a letter in Microsoft Word 2010, you can use the shortcut keys "Ctrl+Shift+:" followed by the letter. This will create the letter with two dots, called a diaeresis or umlaut.
The term bilingual means "two languages" and may refer to a location, or a publication, or a person. A bilingual individual is one who can speak (or more specifically, speak fluently) in 2 different languages.In Canada both English and French are taught because Canada is a bilingual country.There is a term for speaking three languages (trilingual), but more common is the term "multilingual" meaning able to speak several languages.able to speak and understand two languageswritten in two languages.Bilingual means that you can speak more than one language.A person is bilingual if he or she can speak two languages (such as Spanish and English) fluently. (To be fluent in a language means that you can speak and write it well.)
Phonemic languages, like English and Spanish, use a specific set of sounds to create meaning. These languages rely on individual sounds, or phonemes, to distinguish words. In contrast, tonal languages, such as Mandarin Chinese, use pitch variations to convey meaning. Additionally, syllabic languages, like Japanese, use syllables as the basic unit of sound. Phonemic languages differ from tonal and syllabic languages in how they use individual sounds to form words.
It could be multi lingual. It means a person who can use different or a lot of languages
To type "ä" (a with two dots above it), you can use various methods depending on your device. On Windows, you can hold the "Alt" key and type "0228" on the numeric keypad. On a Mac, press "Option" + "u" followed by "a." On a smartphone, long-press the letter "a" and select "ä" from the options that appear.
You spread the dots apart?? Derrrp :D
An umlaut is a symbol used in German, it consists of two little dots above a, o or u to give ä ö ü which changes the pronunciation of the letter
You can't.
use salicylic acid on the spots and exfoliate gently
you use dots and dashes in the Morse code
No. Dots above letters (such as in Noël, maïs, aigüe) known as the "signe tréma" in French, indicate that the world is pronounced differently (like accents do). The tréma is rather rare in French and many French natives tend to forget it when writing.The tréma in french is used to split a dipthong. A dipthong is when two vowels join together to create one sound. For example, a + i = the "i" sound in "like". But sometimes you may wish to not join the sounds. In the case of Maïs, it is pronounced "Ma-is" as opposed to the English word "Mice". It is important to note that this use of the tréma is a particularly french one. The German use, called the "umlaut" is used for rounding vowels and is the most common application of the two dots.
There are two programming languages which use a C switch statement. The two languages are C and C++, hence the name C switch statement. There may be more, but those are the most obvious ones
Yes, the dots that Roy Lichtenstein uses are his signature mark and are called 'Benday Dots'.
This website is the search site for Belgium. It currently supports two languages: French, and Dutch. People who want to use this site but don't speak these languages can use a Chrome browser, which translates many languages.
you line up the dots of the segment to the dots of the protcractor and draw/measure the angles.
The person is said to be bilingual.