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There is usually a diaeresis after the fourth foot.
The latter elision spans the diaeresis in the last line.
In later texts, this became a diaeresis (two dots), or a broken line.
It uses diaeresis over initial upsilon; two corrections were made.
O with diaeresis occurs in several languages which use diaereses.
It has diaeresis; the text is divided according to the chapters, whose numbers are given at the left margin.
The diaeresis was a later addition of the 8th or 9th century to the Secunda.
The opposite process, in which two adjacent vowels are pronounced separately, is known as diaeresis.
Modern Greek has used only two diacritics since 1982, namely the diaeresis and the acute.
In poetry, the diaeresis may be used on i and u as a way to force a hiatus.
Spanish uses the acute accent and the diaeresis.
Accents are written above a diaeresis, or between the two dots in the case of the acute or grave.
Diaeresis is used after the usual circumference.
The dots above the i are a diaeresis (see also Ï).
The initial iota and upsilon have the diaeresis.
Opposite: diaeresis, pronunciation of a diphthong as two syllabic vowels.
The principal caesura (which might in fact be, on the foot-based scheme, a diaeresis) will usually occur near the middle of the line.
But I'll entrance her with amphimacer And a dash of diaeresis.
English speakers and writers once used the diaeresis more often than now in words such as coöperation (from Fr.
(The diaeresis is retained from stage 3, so only the rime letter changes for this tone.)
It has initial letters, diaeresis, and punctuation.
Letter iota is written with diaeresis.
The diaeresis is always written.
The ending of a word and foot together is termed diaeresis and able poets avoided its overuse.
A diaeresis on y only occurs in some proper names and in modern editions of old French texts.
Some people solve this problem by illogically placing a dieresis over the second e .
I naïvely confused an umlaut with a dieresis.
Rare publication guides may still use the dieresis on words, such as "coöperate", rather than the now-more-common "co-operate".
An umlaut changes the sound of a German vowel; a dieresis splits two vowels that are pronounced separately in English.
One popular system places a dieresis above the vowel: ï, ë, ö.
(Since newspapers know the vowel should have a dieresis on it they often misspell it as "ö".)
The dieresis (trèma) ( ) found on ï, ü.
The inability to substitute a circumflex or dieresis for the dot on the "i." The new generation of printers will do it by dint of circuitry.
The two-syllable pronunciation is sometimes indicated with a dieresis, notably in the Lancaster-based weekly newspaper The Coös County Democrat and on some county-owned vehicles.
All incidences of the first and second persons plural of the preterite take the circumflex in the conjugation ending except the verb haïr, due to its necessary dieresis (nous haïmes, vous haïtes).
When two vowels snuggle together confusingly, a clarifying separation is indicated by the dieresis over the second vowel; in naïve, the two dots tell you to pronounce the word "nah-YEEV," not "knave" or "knive."
The naming ceremony took place in his presence; there was a last-minute scramble to repaint the station's new nameboards when it was discovered that the unusual dieresis in his name had been omitted (making the French word for "welcome").
Porter is best known for his "founds", which he has published in numerous collections including Found Poems, The Wastemaker, The Book of Do's, Dieresis, Here Comes Everybody's Don't Book, and Sweet End.
Thus, the German name Müller is pronounced Mue-ller, and in English, we insert an "e" after the "u" to show that it is not pronounced like an ordinary "u." A dieresis denotes the separated pronunciation in English of two uncomfortably adjacent vowels.