Slovak is pretty interesting in this aspect, you basically have this: á, ä, č, ď, é, í, ĺ, ľ, ň, ó, ô, ŕ, š, ť, ú, ý, ž
this post was submitted on 05 Jun 2024
105 points (95.7% liked)
YUROP
1212 readers
1 users here now
A laid back community for good news, pictures and general discussions among people living in Europe.
Other European communities
Other casual communities:
Language communities
Cities
Countries
- !albania@lemmy.world
- !austria@feddit.org
- !belgique@jlai.lu
- !belgium@lemmy.world
- !croatia@lemmy.world
- https://feddit.dk/
- !deutschland@feddit.org / !germany@feddit.org
- !eesti@lemm.ee
- https://lemmy.eus/
- !finland@sopuli.xyz
- !france@jlai.lu
- https://foros.fediverso.gal/
- !greece@lemmy.world
- !hungary@lemmy.world
- Italy: !news@feddit.it
- !ireland@lemmy.world
- !northern_ireland@feddit.uk
- !norway@lemmy.world
- !thenetherlands@feddit.nl
- Poland: !wiadomosci@szmer.info
- !portugal@lemmy.pt
- !romania@feddit.ro
- !suisse@lemmy.world
- !sweden@lemmy.world
- !ukraine@sopuli.xyz
- !unitedkingdom@feddit.uk
- !wales@lemm.ee
founded 9 months ago
MODERATORS
á, é, í, ó, ú are all used in Spanish, but not listed, which is confusing.
Needless usevof a map
I am amazed that Polish almost avoided all of this (they still have a and e with the little commas) but ended up with blinding consonant clusters
Well in french, there are no special character but variation of normal character. Except maybe for œ and æ. Also I'm curious to see an example of ÿ in use.
What about ß?