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Diaeresed?
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A letter is marked with an accent is said to be accentuated; one marked with a circumflex is said to be circumflexed. If a letter is marked with a diaeresis, what can it be said to be?" Diaeresed"? "Diaeresised"? I'd rather a more pretentious term than "umlauted".
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Personally, I'd avoid using any of these as verbs and as a linguist have never heard it done. Umlauted is a definite no-no - as an umlaut has NOTHING to do with a diaeresis!
Accentuate sounds too vague anyway and does not distinguish between grave and acute (I assume you're talking about French). The verb 'to circumflex' means to bend round - so circumflexed is clearly wrong too.
So I'm on Quizmonster's side for this one.
Accentuate sounds too vague anyway and does not distinguish between grave and acute (I assume you're talking about French). The verb 'to circumflex' means to bend round - so circumflexed is clearly wrong too.
So I'm on Quizmonster's side for this one.
Well, dictionary.com says that umlaut and diaeresis are synonyms and it also says that circumflex can mean "to mark or pronounce with a circumflex" (even if dictionary.com is not the most accurate dictionary). Although, considering that circumflex is, in itself, a past participle, "bent'ed around" may not be such an intelligent construction.
I know that accentuate doesn't distinguish between the two types, but it was just an example.
Anyway, thank you both, I think I'll avoid all of these terms (just to be safe).
I know that accentuate doesn't distinguish between the two types, but it was just an example.
Anyway, thank you both, I think I'll avoid all of these terms (just to be safe).
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