Umlaut may refer to: Diaeresis (diacritic), a pair of dots ( ¨ ) above a vowel, used in various languages. Metal
umlaut , the same diacritic
Kaynak: Umlaut The diaeresis,
umlaut, or more generically trema is a diacritic that consists of two dots ( ¨ ) placed over a letter, most commonly a
Kaynak: Diaeresis (diacritic)In linguistics ,
umlaut (from German um- "around"/"the other way" + Laut "sound") is a process whereby a vowel is pronounced more like a
Kaynak: Germanic umlautA metal
umlaut (also known as röck döts) is a trema that is sometimes used gratuitously or decoratively over letters in the names of hard
Kaynak: Metal umlautI-mutation (also known as
umlaut, front mutation, i-
umlaut, i/j-mutation or i/j-
umlaut) is an important type of sound change , more
Kaynak: I-mutation"Ö", or "ö", is a character used in several extended Latin alphabet s, or the letter O with
umlaut to denote the front vowels ø or œ.
Kaynak: ÖAblaut versus
umlaut: I-mutation | Germanic
umlaut In Indo-European linguistics,
umlaut is the vowel alternation that produces such related
Kaynak: ApophonyTonal language s may exhibit tone assimilation (tonal
umlaut, in effect), while sign languages also exhibit assimilation when the
Kaynak: Assimilation (linguistics)A-
umlaut may refer to: Ä , the letter A with an
umlaut. Germanic a-mutation , a historic sound change in Northwest Germanic languages.
Kaynak: A-umlautor "n̈" (referred to as n-diaeresis or n-
umlaut) is a grapheme from several minor extended Latin alphabet s, the letter N with a
Kaynak: N-diaeresisIt is classified as a separate letter in several extended Latin alphabet s, or alternatively as the letter U with an
umlaut /diaeresis
Kaynak: Ü"Ä" and "ä" are both characters that represent either a letter from several extended Latin alphabet s, or the letter A with an
umlautKaynak: ÄIt is used primarily in written Hungarian , and consequently is sometimes referred to as Hungarumlaut, a portmanteau of Hungarian
umlautKaynak: Double acute accentGermanic
umlaut only affected the North and West Germanic languages (which represent all modern Germanic languages) but not the now-
Kaynak: Germanic languages