Natlang Uses of Diaeresis and Umlaut: Difference between revisions

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Diaeresis (known as tréma in French) and umlaut both employ the same character. But there is a difference of use between diaeresis and umlaut. Letters with umlaut stand for completely different sounds than their non-accented counterparts. For example in Swedish Oo represents /u/ while Öö represents /ø/. Diaeresis on the other hand does not change the sound value of a letter, but instead marks that a vowel is not part of a diphthong or digraph. Both are also known under the general name trema.<br>
#REDIRECT [[Diaeresis_and_Umlaut]]
The diaeresis and umlaut characters have different origins. Diaeresis was borrowed from the Greek alphabet,[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diaeresis_(diacritic)#History] while umlaut began as a small e placed on top of Aa, Oo or Uu. This e then later evolved into the same shape as diaeresis.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diaeresis_(diacritic)#History_2]
 
== Diaeresis/Umlaut in Unicode ==
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Precomposed Letters with Diaeresis/Umlaut
| style="font-size:180%" | ¨ || style="font-size:180%" | ◌̈ || style="font-size:180%" | Ä || style="font-size:180%" | ä || style="font-size:180%" | Ǟ || style="font-size:180%" | ǟ || style="font-size:180%" | Ë || style="font-size:180%" | ë || style="font-size:180%" | Ḧ || style="font-size:180%" | ḧ || style="font-size:180%" | Ï || style="font-size:180%" | ï || style="font-size:180%" | Ḯ
|-
| U+00A8 || U+0308 || U+00C4 || U+00E4 || U+01DE || U+01DF || U+00CB || U+00EB || U+1E26 || U+1E27 || U+00CF ||​ U+00EF || U+1E2E
|-
| Diaeresis || Combining Diaeresis || Latin Capital Letter A With Diaeresis || Latin Small Letter A With Diaeresis || Latin Capital Letter A With Diaeresis And Macron || Latin Small Letter A With Diaeresis And Macron || Latin Capital Letter E With Diaeresis || Latin Small Letter E With Diaeresis || Latin Capital Letter H With Diaeresis || Latin Small Letter H With Diaeresis || Latin Capital Letter I With Diaeresis || Latin Small Letter I With Diaeresis || Latin Capital Letter I With Diaeresis And Acute
|-
| style="font-size:180%" | ḯ || style="font-size:180%" | Ö || style="font-size:180%" | ö || style="font-size:180%" | Ȫ || style="font-size:180%" | ȫ || style="font-size:180%" | Ṏ || style="font-size:180%" | ṏ || style="font-size:180%" | ẗ || style="font-size:180%" | Ü || style="font-size:180%" | ü || style="font-size:180%" | Ǖ || style="font-size:180%" | ǖ || style="font-size:180%" | Ǘ
|-
| U+1E2F || U+00D6 || U+00F6 ||​ U+022A || U+022B || U+1E4E || U+1E4F || U+1E97 || U+00DC ||​ U+00FC || U+01D5 || U+01D6 || U+01D7
|-
| Latin Small Letter I With Diaeresis And Acute ||​ Latin Capital Letter O With Diaeresis || Latin Small Letter O With Diaeresis ||​ Latin Capital Letter O With Diaeresis And Macron || Latin Small Letter O With Diaeresis And Macron || Latin Capital Letter O With Tilde And Diaeresis || Latin Small Letter O With Tilde And Diaeresis || Latin Small Letter T With Diaeresis || Latin Capital Letter U With Diaeresis || Latin Small Letter U With Diaeresis || Latin Capital Letter U With Diaeresis And Macron || Latin Small Letter U With Diaeresis And Macron ||​ Latin Capital Letter U With Diaeresis And Acute
|-
| style="font-size:180%" | ǘ || style="font-size:180%" | Ǚ || style="font-size:180%" | ǚ || style="font-size:180%" | Ǜ || style="font-size:180%" | ǜ || style="font-size:180%" | Ṻ || style="font-size:180%" | ṻ || style="font-size:180%" | Ẅ || style="font-size:180%" | ẅ || style="font-size:180%" | Ẍ || style="font-size:180%" | ẍ || style="font-size:180%" | Ÿ || style="font-size:180%" | ÿ
|-
| U+01D8 || U+01D9 || U+01DA || U+01DB || U+01DC || U+1E7A || U+1E7B || U+1E84 || U+1E85 || U+1E8C || U+1E8D || U+0178 || U+00FF
|-
| Latin Small Letter U With Diaeresis And Acute || Latin Capital Letter U With Diaeresis And Caron || Latin Small Letter U With Diaeresis And Caron || Latin Capital Letter U With Diaeresis And Grave || Latin Small Letter U With Diaeresis And Grave || Latin Capital Letter U With Macron And Diaeresis || Latin Small Letter U With Macron And Diaeresis || Latin Capital Letter W With Diaeresis || Latin Small Letter W With Diaeresis || Latin Capital Letter X With Diaeresis || Latin Small Letter X With Diaeresis || Latin Capital Letter Y With Diaeresis || Latin Small Letter Y With Diaeresis
|}
 
== Natlang Examples ==
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Uses of Diaeresis or Umlaut
! Usage
! Language
! Letters
! Notes
|-
| rowspan=7 | Front version of back vowel (this includes Ää even though its unaccented version is not a back vowel in all of these languages)
| [[Wikipedia:Estonian_language|Estonian]]
| Ää /æ/, Öö /ø/, Üü /y/
|
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Finnish_language|Finnish]]
| Ää /æ/, Öö /ø/
| Usage borrowed from Swedish.
|-
| [[Wikipedia:German_language|German]]
| Ää /ɛ/, Öö /ø/, Üü /y/
| The umlaut evolved from the letter e in the digraphs ae, oe and ue.
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Livonian_language|Livonian]]
| Ää /æ/, Ǟǟ /æː/
|
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Hungarian_language|Hungarian]]
| Öö /ø/, Üü /y/
|
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Slovak_language|Slovak]]
| Ää /æ~ɛ/
| /æ/ is archaic or dialectal pronunciation.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slovak_language]
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Swedish_language|Swedish]]
| Ää /ɛ/, Öö /ø/, Üü /y/
| The umlaut evolved from the letter e in the digraphs ae[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%84] and oe[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96]. Üü is not really a part of the Swedish alphabet, but is used in some loanwords and in many surnames.
|-
| rowspan=2 | Hiatus
| [[Wikipedia:Catalan_language|Catalan]]
| Ïï /i/, Üü /u/
| Diaeresis on an Ii or Uu following another vowel marks that the two vowels are in different syllables. Without diaresis, the Ii or Uu would stand for a semivowel.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalan_alphabet#Diaeresis]
|-
| [[Wikipedia:French_language|French]]
| Ëë, Ïï, Üü, Ÿÿ
|
|-
| Non-silent vowel
| [[Wikipedia:Catalan_language|Catalan]]
| Üü /w/
| Diaresis on an Uu that is between Gg or Qq and a front vowel marks that this letter stands for /w/. Otherwise it would be a part of the digraph Gu gu /g/ or Qu qu /k/ that is used before front vowels.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalan_alphabet#Diaeresis]
|-
| Raised vowel
| [[Wikipedia:Hungarian_language|Hungarian]]
| Ëë /e/
| Unaccented Ee stands for /ɛ/. Ëë is not really a part of the Hungarian alphabet however; it is used when writing down spoken or sung language in a dialect that has this phoneme.
|}
 
[[Category:Natscripts]]

Latest revision as of 04:07, 12 August 2013