অভিশ্রুতি, স্বরপরিবর্তনবিশেষ
(1) A diacritical mark (two dots
(2) A diacritical mark (two dots) placed over a vowel in German to indicate a change in sound
(1) It is important to note that in many OE words containing vowels affected by umlaut , the /i/ or /j/ in the following unstressed syllable has been lost.
(2) The mutations of a basic vowel by umlaut are of two kinds in OE.
(3) Not all vowel gradations are caused by umlaut .
(4) German umlauts appear to be a problem in some cases.
(5) This changed when the reform-minded leader Kemal Mustafa Attaturk, for better or for worse, adopted a Romanization system which heavily uses umlauts to modify various sounds.
(6) Accented and umlauted vowels, and diacritical marks on consonants must be avoided, because they act as roadblocks and break the speed of a typist.
(7) In the choral movement of his ninth symphony, the soprano soloist has to sing her highest note on the umlauted U in flu00d4u00f6u00a3u00d4u00f2u00d8gel, an even more daunting vowel sound than that in u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510who'd.u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb
(8) How can I use umlauted letters in spelling surnames?
(9) Furthermore, Hungarian, Turkish and Finnish (which are Ural-Altaic languages like Korean and share phonetic qualities with it) also extensively use umlauts .
(10) The evidence is that originally the German keyboard produced circumflexes instead of umlauts but it was replaced by an English keyboard.
(11) There are actually 2 ways to make umlauted vowels.
(12) Come on folks, don't you know how to pronounce vowels with umlauts over them?
(13) That's like the umlauted vowel in the first syllable of the German town name Tu00d4u00f6u00a3u00d4u00f2u00d8bingen.
diaeresis
dieresis