[soc.culture.german] Umlaute [was: naive

tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) (05/20/91)

In article <617@mailgzrz.tu-berlin.de> mbut0135@w203zrz.zrz.tu-berlin.de (Matthias Butt) writes:

   2. Let me just add that the lack of umlaut characters in
   international alphabets and in the ASCII code need noty disturb our
   [German] national pride either.
   [...]
    Thus it seems appropriate to use the term *umlaut* or *umlaut character*
    for the German characters /"a, /"o and /"u because they reflect the 
    an umlaut process in writing. In this case it is the whole 
    character including the diacritics (which in turn may be called 
    umlaut marks) which is referred to. The term doesnt seem to be
    appropriate to refer to characters with a trema denoting dieresis
    or some other property unrelated to umlaut as a phonological process.

You should probably also have mentioned that the German umlaut
derives from two-vowel combinations. So, '\"a' used to be
spelled 'ae'. The "two dots" started out being a little 'e'
in Gothic script (which looks like two small parallel lines or
like a small 'n'), then was moved above the preceding vowel
(similar to the 'fi' ligature in English print), and finally
degenerated into two little dots. The German sharp-s, a character
that looks sort of like a beta, similarly, is simply a ligature
between an 's' and a 'z'.

Historically, it may have been nice to provide these ligatures to
improve the appearance of printed text.  However, German can be
written perfectly well with only the standard 26 letter "English"
alphabet, and in this day and age of standardization, it would
probably be a good idea to make use of the umlaut and the 'sz'
ligature optional and eventually eliminate them altogether.

To add to the confusion, the official substitute for writing 'sz' when
the special character is not available is 'ss'. As far as I can tell,
this was a really bad decision, since 'ss' carries with it the idea
that the preceding vowel is short, whereas 'sz' indicates that the
preceding vowel is normal or long; there is no good reason not to
write the 'sz' letter as 'sz' when the letter is not available.

					Thomas.

bergmann@leland.Stanford.EDU (Bergmann) (05/21/91)

In article <TMB.91May20125338@volterra.ai.mit.edu> tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) writes:
>   [...]
>
>To add to the confusion, the official substitute for writing 'sz' when
>the special character is not available is 'ss'. As far as I can tell,
>this was a really bad decision, since 'ss' carries with it the idea
>that the preceding vowel is short, whereas 'sz' indicates that the
>preceding vowel is normal or long; there is no good reason not to
>write the 'sz' letter as 'sz' when the letter is not available.

Hoho -- strong words! I'll give you one reason which seems good
enough to me: the German "z" is pronounced "ts," so I, for one,
read "dasts" when I see "dasz."  (It's even worse with words
that are less common, e.g. "saszen.")

I'll grant you that much of this has to do with usage. Und frau
gewoehnt sich bekanntlich an allem, selbst am Dativ.

Annette

tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) (05/21/91)

In article <1991May20.190249.12782@leland.Stanford.EDU> bergmann@leland.Stanford.EDU (Bergmann) writes:
   In article <TMB.91May20125338@volterra.ai.mit.edu> tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) writes:
   >To add to the confusion, the official substitute for writing 'sz' when
   >the special character is not available is 'ss'. As far as I can tell,
   >this was a really bad decision, since 'ss' carries with it the idea
   >that the preceding vowel is short, whereas 'sz' indicates that the
   >preceding vowel is normal or long; there is no good reason not to
   >write the 'sz' letter as 'sz' when the letter is not available.

   Hoho -- strong words! I'll give you one reason which seems good
   enough to me: the German "z" is pronounced "ts," so I, for one,
   read "dasts" when I see "dasz."  (It's even worse with words
   that are less common, e.g. "saszen.")

* German, like most other languages, uses two- and three letter
  combinations to express other sounds. It presumably doesn't bother
  you that 'c' is pronounced 'ts' or 'k' in isolation when you
  encounter it in words like 'Schnee' or 'Chemie'.

* Historically, 'sz' _was_ written as two separate letters. This
  strongly suggests that there are no significant ambiguities arising
  from writing it as two separate letters (as far as I know the change
  was mostly made for typographic reasons). Furthermore, the
  combination is visually distinctive enough that it is easy to spot.

* The convention of using 'ss' to indicate 'sz' is much worse, since
  it breaks the simple rules on which German pronunciation is based:
  you cannot determine the length of the vowel preceding the 'ss'
  anymore. Any rare pair would be better than 'ss' to indicate sharp-s
  in the absence of the special character, even 'xx', 'sx', 'qz', etc.
  'sz' just happens to be an infrequent pair, somewhat meaningful (the
  's' indicates the sound, the 'z' absence of voicing (in German)),
  historically accurate, and in agreement with usage in several other
  languages.

Sure, words like "saszen", "Fuesze", and "Uebermasz", may look unusual
at first if you are used to reading them with an umlaut and a sharp-s,
but that doesn't demonstrate that indicating an umlaut and a sharp-s
in that way intrinsically has to be confusing.

					Thomas.

dorai@titan.rice.edu (Dorai Sitaram) (05/21/91)

In article <TMB.91May20125338@volterra.ai.mit.edu> tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) writes:
>degenerated into two little dots. The German sharp-s, a character
>that looks sort of like a beta, similarly, is simply a ligature
>between an 's' and a 'z'.

Really?  The old fraktur script (cf. Greek) provides two ways of
writing an s: one long like an f that starts syllables, the other more
like the regular s to end syllables.  The sharp-s ligature is formed
from the long f-like s followed by the short one.  There is no z
anywhere in the picture.

>To add to the confusion, the official substitute for writing 'sz' when
>the special character is not available is 'ss'. As far as I can tell,
>this was a really bad decision, since 'ss' carries with it the idea
>that the preceding vowel is short, whereas 'sz' indicates that the
>preceding vowel is normal or long; there is no good reason not to
>write the 'sz' letter as 'sz' when the letter is not available.

The use of ss for sharp-s could be confusing for the reasons you
state: it suggests falsely that the preceding vowel is short.
However, using sz is not unambiguous either.  There are several cases
where sz is used simply because it ends a word/syllable, regardless of
whether is the preceding vowel is long -- e.g., Grusz -- or short --
e.g., Flusz.  Thus, ss and sz szuck in different ways -- as the astute
P.G. Wodehouse observes, "what you gain on the swings you lose on the
roundabouts."  What's the merit in that?

(If you could legislate such that sz is used only when the preceding
vowel is long, and ss is used everywhere else -- word/syllable end or
no --, you _might_ be in business.)

--d

PS:  Uebrigens, wer ist der PGW des Deutschen?

amanda@visix.com (Amanda Walker) (05/21/91)

tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) writes:

   You should probably also have mentioned that the German umlaut
   derives from two-vowel combinations. So, '\"a' used to be
   spelled 'ae'. The "two dots" started out being a little 'e'
   in Gothic script (which looks like two small parallel lines or
   like a small 'n'), then was moved above the preceding vowel
   (similar to the 'fi' ligature in English print), and finally
   degenerated into two little dots. The German sharp-s, a character
   that looks sort of like a beta, similarly, is simply a ligature
   between an 's' and a 'z'.

This is true for all western European diacritical marks, which were
not particularly standardized until the printing press came along.
Diacrtical marks originated as scribes' "shorthand" for common
combinations of letters.  German scribes used a trema for "following
e", French scribes used a circumflex for "vowel + s", ae and oe
diphthongs became ligatures, and so on.  Relatively few of these have
actually survived; if you look at a medieval manuscript, you will see
all sort of diacritics and abbreviation marks (the most popular one in
Christian religious documents was probably "ds" with a macron, which
was the abbreviation for "Deus").  Ligatures were more common, and in fact
survived into printing for quite a while, as did contextual forms such as
the long "s".  They only fell out of use in printing in the 19th century,
and are starting to make a comeback.

The situation for areas which weren't colonized by Rome gets more
interesting, since they tend to use non-Roman characters instead of
diacritics.  For example, Scandinavian languages use a mixture of
diacritics and non-Roman characters (the Icelandic "thorn", for example,
which was also in common use for English until relatively recently).

Standardized orthography, and the corresponding treatment of
diacritics and ligatures, seems (to me) to be more of an artifact of
the printing press than anything else.
--
Amanda Walker						      amanda@visix.com
Visix Software Inc.					...!uunet!visix!amanda
-- 
"It can hardly be coincidence that no language on earth has ever
 produced the expression "As pretty as an airport."	--Douglas Adams

tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) (05/22/91)

   In article <TMB.91May20125338@volterra.ai.mit.edu> tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) writes:
   >degenerated into two little dots. The German sharp-s, a character
   >that looks sort of like a beta, similarly, is simply a ligature
   >between an 's' and a 'z'.

   Really?  The old fraktur script (cf. Greek) provides two ways of
   writing an s: one long like an f that starts syllables, the other more
   like the regular s to end syllables.  The sharp-s ligature is formed
   from the long f-like s followed by the short one.

   There is no z anywhere in the picture.

No, it is a ligature of the "f"-like "s" and a "z" (that's why it's
called an "ess-zett").

The "s" that ends a word in Fraktur looks more like the Roman "s", and
I have never seen it word internal in German.

holley@sono.uucp (Greg Holley) (05/22/91)

In article <TMB.91May20125338@volterra.ai.mit.edu> tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) writes:

> Historically, it may have been nice to provide these ligatures to
> improve the appearance of printed text.  However, German can be
> written perfectly well with only the standard 26 letter "English"
> alphabet, and in this day and age of standardization, it would
> probably be a good idea to make use of the umlaut and the 'sz'
> ligature optional and eventually eliminate them altogether.

What is the point of compacting the German alphabet, at the cost of
hideous combinations of letters to represent a single vowel or dipthong
(or do you like "laeuft"?), when virtually every other European* language
uses diacrital marks of some sort or another?  Do you also want to
force the Spanish, French, Dutch, and Danish (who already have too many
vowels for their alphabet) to use the "standard 26 letter alphabet"?

There aren't that many diacrital marks and unique letters in the
Western European languages, and many computer programs I use are able
to use them.  The only problem is that, in the absence of an
international 8-bit standard, the programs can't trade umlauts and
tildes with one another.  The solution is to come up with a standard,
rather than to ban the marks and make the world blander.

[*Apologies to Greeks, Russians, and any other Europeans using non-Roman
alphabets]
-- 
Greg Holley     sun!sono!holley     holley@sono.uucp

"My tale is so strange that, were it written with needles on the interior
corner of an eye, yet would it prove a lesson to the circumspect."

lewis@bnrmtl.bnr.ca (Pierre LEWis) (05/22/91)

In article <HOLLEY.91May21183931@fog.sono.uucp>, holley@sono.uucp (Greg
Holley) writes:

> There aren't that many diacrital marks and unique letters in the
> Western European languages, and many computer programs I use are able
> to use them.  The only problem is that, in the absence of an
> international 8-bit standard, the programs can't trade umlauts and
> tildes with one another.  The solution is to come up with a standard,
> rather than to ban the marks and make the world blander.

Actually there are too many.  IBM has one (based on EBCDIC) which our
mainframe printers support, DEC has one with their VT-100 (which I use in
the Unix world - even works in my xterm), and MS-DOS has the new code page
850 (works great for me with WP).  Just to name a few.  But it's unfortunate
that foreign language support is quite weak on many machines and softwares.
What Unix editor today supports diacritical marks?  But that's a discussion
for comp.editors.

On eszet.  Seems to me that in modern german they are often used where "ss"
is also used: z.B. wir muessen, ich muB (B stands for eszet here).  So if
there is no eszet on the keyboard, I'll certainly prefer "ss" to "sz".
Second, when on goes all caps in modern german, I learned that the eszet is
replaced by "SS", not "SZ" and that is what I remember observing in print
(UNREGELMASSIGE ENGLISCHE VERBEN just found in my dictionary, in lower case
one would have unregelmaBige (both As are umlauts here of course)).

Notwithstanding the origin of the eszet (as the name says).

--
Pierre LEWIS    +1 514 765 8207
Internet:       bnrmtl!lewis@Larry.McRCIM.McGill.EDU

P.S. I enjoy(ed) this stream...

covert@covert.enet.dec.com (John R. Covert) (05/22/91)

In article <HOLLEY.91May21183931@fog.sono.uucp>, holley@sono.uucp (Greg Holley)
 writes...
> 
>There aren't that many diacrital marks and unique letters in the
>Western European languages, and many computer programs I use are able
>to use them.  The only problem is that, in the absence of an
>international 8-bit standard, the programs can't trade umlauts and
>tildes with one another.  The solution is to come up with a standard,
>rather than to ban the marks and make the world blander.

There is an international standard.  ISO Latin-1 (it has a four digit
number I can't remember right now) handles the most common Western
European languages.  All currently sold DEC terminals (and many others)
support the language, as does almost all software (editors, document
preparation tools, mail programs, conference software) running under VMS.

Unfortunately, the RFCs for internet mail, as well as almost all U*x
software, insist on stripping off the eighth bit.

/john

tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) (05/22/91)

In article <HOLLEY.91May21183931@fog.sono.uucp> holley@sono.uucp (Greg Holley) writes:
   In article <TMB.91May20125338@volterra.ai.mit.edu> tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) writes:

   > and in this day and age of standardization, it would probably be
   > a good idea to make use of the umlaut and the 'sz' ligature
   > optional and eventually eliminate them altogether.

   What is the point of compacting the German alphabet, at the cost of
   hideous combinations of letters to represent a single vowel or dipthong
   (or do you like "laeuft"?), when virtually every other European* language
   uses diacrital marks of some sort or another?

I don't think the combinations are any more hideous that what German
and most other languages already have: "sch", "ch", "au", etc. It's
merely a question of what you are used to.

   There aren't that many diacrital marks and unique letters in the
   Western European languages, and many computer programs I use are able
   to use them.

The problem is not that computer programs are incompatible with it;
_I_ am incompatible with it. It is a pain having to get used to
different keyboards for different languages, having to deal with
different string ordering conventions, etc. Furthermore, these
diacritical marks eat up precious keyboard real estate; brackets
and braces are in much harder to reach places on, say, a German
keyboard (if they are there at all) than on an American keyboard.

   Do you also want to force the Spanish, French, Dutch, and Danish
   (who already have too many vowels for their alphabet) to use the
   "standard 26 letter alphabet"?

No country can be "forced" to give up their orthograpy.

In any case, I believe most dialects of English already have more
vowels than any of the languages you mention (certainly more than
Spanish). English has somewhere around 14 vowels.

					Thomas.

btiffany@pbs.org (05/23/91)

In article <TMB.91May22102757@volterra.ai.mit.edu>, tmb@ai.mit.edu
	(Thomas M. Breuel) writes:

> In any case, I believe most dialects of English already have more
> vowels than any of the languages you mention (certainly more than
> Spanish). English has somewhere around 14 vowels.

FOURTEEN?  Well, when I was knee high from the floor in school they taught me
only FIVE:  A E I O and U!  It was mentioned that sometimes Y can act like
a vowel, but it is still a consonant.  So at most you might say English has
5.5 vowels.  But 14??  Where did you come up with such a figure?

-- Bruce Tiffany					btiffany@pbs.org

goer@ellis.uchicago.edu (Richard L. Goerwitz) (05/23/91)

In article <1991May22.141034.12747@pbs.org> btiffany@pbs.org writes:
>
>> In any case, I believe most dialects of English already have more
>> vowels than any of the languages you mention (certainly more than
>> Spanish). English has somewhere around 14 vowels.
>
>FOURTEEN?  Well, when I was knee high from the floor in school they taught me
>only FIVE:  A E I O and U!

Bruce, he's not talking about graphemes, i.e. the things you draw with pen
and ink.  He's talking about the vowels themselves.  Don't for a moment sup-
pose that the English writing and English sounds correspond very closely.
In fact English has a much richer vowel inventory than its writing system
is capable of representing - even using double vowels like au, ou, etc. in
addition to our Latin vowel-symbols AEIOU and sometimes Y.

Hope this helps.
-- 

   -Richard L. Goerwitz              goer%sophist@uchicago.bitnet
   goer@sophist.uchicago.edu         rutgers!oddjob!gide!sophist!goer

rcharman@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (Robert Craig Harman) (05/23/91)

In <1991May22.141034.12747@pbs.org> btiffany@pbs.org writes:
>In <TMB.91May22102757@volterra.ai.mit.edu> tmb@ai.mit.edu (T M Breuel) writes:
>> In any case, I believe most dialects of English already have more
>> vowels than any of the languages you mention (certainly more than
>> Spanish). English has somewhere around 14 vowels.
>
>FOURTEEN?  Well, when I was knee high from the floor in school they taught me
>only FIVE:  A E I O and U!  It was mentioned that sometimes Y can act like
>a vowel, but it is still a consonant.  So at most you might say English has
>5.5 vowels.  But 14??  Where did you come up with such a figure?

Fourteen vowel sounds, I believe he means; those being:

ah in father/hot
a  in cat
aw in bought/draw
ai in pain/may
eh in net/send
ee in field/seal
ih in bit/kill
ie in pie/type
o  in hope/coal
u  in put/book
oo in boot/cool
uh in cut/bluff
ow in dowel/scow
@  in pencil (pen-s@l)/woman (wu m@n)  [the schwa sound]

These each have stressed and unstressed variants (e.g., "sigh" vs. "type"), as
well as variations before "l" and "r", but, by and large, 14 is pretty accurate.

							  craig
							no .sig
							go .fig

eager@ringworld.Eng.Sun.COM (Michael J. Eager) (05/23/91)

In article <TMB.91May22102757@volterra.ai.mit.edu> tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) writes:
>
>I don't think the combinations are any more hideous that what German
>and most other languages already have: "sch", "ch", "au", etc. It's
>merely a question of what you are used to.
>
>In any case, I believe most dialects of English already have more
>vowels than any of the languages you mention (certainly more than
>Spanish). English has somewhere around 14 vowels.

Doesn't it sort of muddy the waters to mix phonemes into a discussion
of fonts and orthography?  

German has umlauts; it also has standard orthographic substitutions for them
which do not use the dots: ae, oe, ue.  

Sch, ch, au, mentioned above, are not orthographic substitutions;
they _are_ the orthography.

English may have fourteen vowel sounds (I'd really guess at a higher 
number if you include pronounciations from New England, Manchester, Texas, 
etc.) but it has 5 (perhaps as many as 7) orthographic vowels: a, e, i, o, u
and occasionally y and w.  

Orthography does not match phonetics in any language I am aware of.  That
is why there is an International Phonetic Alphabet.  


-- Mike Eager

cindy@solan.unit.no (Cindy Kandolf) (05/23/91)

bruce: calm down... remember each vowel letter in english on its own comes
in two varieties, long and short.  that makes ten right there.  possibly the
other 4 are diphthong sounds?  not sure, but 14 isn't all that high if you
remember we're talking about -sounds-, not spelling.

i heard somewhere that english actually has 44 sounds.  the speaker didnt
mention anything about which brand of english he was talking about, though.
and i've always been too lazy to count the number of sounds on charts in
linguistics books.  (memorize them, yes; count them, no.)

-cindy kandolf
 cindy@solan.unit.no
 trondheim, norway

btiffany@pbs.org (05/23/91)

In article <1991May23.112541*cindy@solan.unit.no>,
	cindy@solan.unit.no (Cindy Kandolf) writes:

> bruce: calm down...

Whew!!  OK, since it's you who's saying it ...	:-)

> ... remember each vowel letter in english on its own comes
> in two varieties, long and short.  that makes ten right there.

Yeah, 10 SOUNDS.  5 vowels, 10 vowel sounds.

> ... 14 isn't all that high if you
> remember we're talking about -sounds-, not spelling.

Right.  In fact, as I already said, I bet there are a lot more than 14!
I understand what they're talking about now:  vowel sounds.

Anybody wanna guess how many consonant sounds we have?  (Not I!)

-- Bruce

btiffany@pbs.org (05/23/91)

In article <9864@idunno.Princeton.EDU>,
	rcharman@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (Robert Craig Harman) writes:
> In <1991May22.141034.12747@pbs.org> btiffany@pbs.org writes:
>>In <TMB.91May22102757@volterra.ai.mit.edu> tmb@ai.mit.edu (T M Breuel) writes:
>>> In any case, I believe most dialects of English already have more
>>> vowels than any of the languages you mention (certainly more than
>>> Spanish). English has somewhere around 14 vowels.
>>
>>FOURTEEN?  Well, when I was knee high from the floor in school they taught me
>>only FIVE:  A E I O and U!  It was mentioned that sometimes Y can act like
>>a vowel, but it is still a consonant.  So at most you might say English has
>>5.5 vowels.  But 14??  Where did you come up with such a figure?
> 
> Fourteen vowel sounds, I believe he means; those being:
           ^^^^^^^^^^^^
> [...]
>
>These each have stressed and unstressed variants (e.g., "sigh" vs. "type"), as
>well as variations before "l" and "r", but, by and large, 14 is pretty accurate.

OK, five vowels and 14 vowel sounds.

But if you're talking about the sounds vowels make, rather than the vowels
themselves, I can't believe there are only 14.  There must be many, many more.
Maybe Peter Jennings uses only 14, but if you go to Maine, and then to
the Appalachians of southwestern Virginia and eastern Kentucky, and then to
Upstate New York (where they have a pretty unique way of pronouncing the sound
made in words like "about" and "boat"), and then to Georgia and Alabama, you'll
compile a lot more than 14 sounds!  Our five vowels truly have many talents!

But there are 5 vowels.  :-)

-- Bruce

grr@cbmvax.commodore.com (George Robbins) (05/23/91)

In article <1991May22.141034.12747@pbs.org> btiffany@pbs.org writes:
> In article <TMB.91May22102757@volterra.ai.mit.edu>, tmb@ai.mit.edu
> 	(Thomas M. Breuel) writes:
> 
> > In any case, I believe most dialects of English already have more
> > vowels than any of the languages you mention (certainly more than
> > Spanish). English has somewhere around 14 vowels.
> 
> FOURTEEN?  Well, when I was knee high from the floor in school they taught me
> only FIVE:  A E I O and U!  It was mentioned that sometimes Y can act like
> a vowel, but it is still a consonant.  So at most you might say English has
> 5.5 vowels.  But 14??  Where did you come up with such a figure?

Elementary school spelling rules are simplifications that bear little
resemblance to the english language.  There are only 26 letters, but
many more distinct vowells and consonants.  These are encoded partly
as letter combinations and partly by convention.

-- 
George Robbins - now working for,     uucp:   {uunet|pyramid|rutgers}!cbmvax!grr
but no way officially representing:   domain: grr@cbmvax.commodore.com
Commodore, Engineering Department     phone:  215-431-9349 (only by moonlite)

kris@tpki.toppoint.de (Kristian Koehntopp) (05/23/91)

tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) writes:
>The problem is not that computer programs are incompatible with it;
>_I_ am incompatible with it. It is a pain having to get used to
>different keyboards for different languages, having to deal with
>different string ordering conventions, etc.

Well, then: _I_ am incompatible with alternative representations for the
real german Umlauts (tm). No program and no book using german language with
these poor excuses for real characters will survive any encounter with me
with netnews being the only exception (and this is only, because otherwise I
will have no news at all, which is even worse :-). This is my mother
language and I will not tolerate any of these ASCII cruelties you do to it.

Thank you.

>No country can be "forced" to give up their orthograpy.

Right.

Kristian

PS: Please excuse any cruelties I did to your mother language.

Kristian Koehntopp, Harmsstrasse 98, 2300 Kiel, +49 431 676689
                                                      WATCH OU

btiffany@pbs.org (05/24/91)

In article <21835@cbmvax.commodore.com>,
	grr@cbmvax.commodore.com (George Robbins) writes:

> Elementary school spelling rules are simplifications that bear little
> resemblance to the english language.  There are only 26 letters, but
> many more distinct vowells and consonants.  These are encoded partly
> as letter combinations and partly by convention.

Alas!  I've been speaking this wondrous tongue lo these 3+ decades with
apparent alacrity and aplomb, only to learn at this late stage that I didn't
even know what I was doing!  Oh, woe is me ...

-- Bruce

P.S.  There's only one "L" in "vowel" ...	:-)

holley@sono.uucp (Greg Holley) (05/24/91)

In article <TMB.91May22102757@volterra.ai.mit.edu> tmb@ai.mit.edu (Thomas M. Breuel) writes:
> 
> In article <HOLLEY.91May21183931@fog.sono.uucp> holley@sono.uucp (Greg Holley) writes:
>
>    Do you also want to force the Spanish, French, Dutch, and Danish
>    (who already have too many vowels for their alphabet) to use the
>    "standard 26 letter alphabet"?
> 
> No country can be "forced" to give up their orthograpy.
> 
> In any case, I believe most dialects of English already have more
> vowels than any of the languages you mention (certainly more than
> Spanish). English has somewhere around 14 vowels.

I meant the parenthetical remark to apply only to Danish, which seems
to have more vowels than all the rest of the Western European languages
put together (either that, or it's a tonal language :-) ).  As far as
I can tell, Danish packs five vowels where any sane language would have
only three, and then records them with a mystic code understood only by
the true descendants of Vikings.  The orthography is already so screwy
that you have to memorize the pronunciations of half the words (as if
any non-Dane could ever hope to pronounce them).  If you took away the
strange letters, even the Danes would probably find it hard to speak
Danish.

Ob. German:  Has anyone noticed that the quality of Doener Kebabs
in Berlin has improved over the last six years?


-- 
Greg Holley     sun!sono!holley     holley@sono.uucp

"My tale is so strange that, were it written with needles on the interior
corner of an eye, yet would it prove a lesson to the circumspect."

grr@cbmvax.commodore.com (George Robbins) (05/24/91)

In article <1991May23.145439.12763@pbs.org> btiffany@pbs.org writes:
> In article <21835@cbmvax.commodore.com>,
> 	grr@cbmvax.commodore.com (George Robbins) writes:
> 
> > Elementary school spelling rules are simplifications that bear little
> > resemblance to the english language.  There are only 26 letters, but
> > many more distinct vowells and consonants.  These are encoded partly
> > as letter combinations and partly by convention.
> 
> Alas!  I've been speaking this wondrous tongue lo these 3+ decades with
> apparent alacrity and aplomb, only to learn at this late stage that I didn't
> even know what I was doing!  Oh, woe is me ...

Life is for learning.  If you had bothered to look in the dictionary, you'll
find the first definition for vowel is a member of a class of sounds, and the
aeiou(y) bit comes in second. 
> 
> -- Bruce
> 
> P.S.  There's only one "L" in "vowel" ...	:-)

Two l's are alllllways better than one.  8-)

-- 
George Robbins - now working for,     uucp:   {uunet|pyramid|rutgers}!cbmvax!grr
but no way officially representing:   domain: grr@cbmvax.commodore.com
Commodore, Engineering Department     phone:  215-431-9349 (only by moonlite)

arktik@ersys.edmonton.ab.ca (Ryan Daum) (05/26/91)

btiffany@pbs.org writes:

> In article <TMB.91May22102757@volterra.ai.mit.edu>, tmb@ai.mit.edu
> 	(Thomas M. Breuel) writes:
> 
> > In any case, I believe most dialects of English already have more
> > vowels than any of the languages you mention (certainly more than
> > Spanish). English has somewhere around 14 vowels.
> 
> FOURTEEN?  Well, when I was knee high from the floor in school they taught me
> only FIVE:  A E I O and U!  It was mentioned that sometimes Y can act like
> a vowel, but it is still a consonant.  So at most you might say English has
> 5.5 vowels.  But 14??  Where did you come up with such a figure?
> 
> -- Bruce Tiffany					btiffany@pbs.org


Easy!  Just include all the different ways of saying vowel 
combinations... 

For example, the "au" combination is not pronounced "a-u" ... it's a 
single sound therefore it's a seperate vowel?



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