I know it's not an english letter so why does it appear in english names like chloë for example? You are not talking about the process of reading but the meaning you derived from reading @vincentkrebs in that example the e.g. seems parenthetical
ìœ·ë†€ì ´ 세트 패브ë¦ë „안
It could be omitted entirely
Therefore, it should have two commas (one before and one after) or none, the choice being a matter of style and possibly dependent on factors such as for example the length of the sentence
For example, i think i prefer the previous sentence with the two commas around for example, but i left them out. Is it appropriate to use e.g. in a sentence without using parentheses This administrative access control should provide visibility into access via multiple vectors (e.g Ok what accent mark should be on the name chloe for an american, e, è, é, ê, ë
I am an argument with a peer and would like some outside opinions This is implied by the second quote, but one thing you could add is if one wants to make an educated guess at whether one is looking at a dieresis or an umlaut, one should look if the diacritic is placed over a vowel that is preceded by another vowel, in which case it is more likely a dieresis If the vowel in question is preceded by a consonant, then almost certainly an umlaut, since it. As i said, you have to distinguish english spelling from pronunciation
There's no difference between the lettersae together and the æ ligature
The words encyclopædia, encyclopedia, and encyclopaedia are all pronounced the same, however you pronounce them I pronounce that vowel as /i/, myself. I have a relation who has named their child zoe, on the grounds that “in english we don’t use the dots”, but they pronounce it like the second version Of course i don’t want to argue that’s not.
I hear three different sounds for the letter e in precious, bean, and peru Is there a rule that covers the different pronunciations that a written letter e can represent in speech? Tl;dr the e was pronounced (until it wasn't) Generally, our spelling system has kept it when it made a difference to the pronunciation of the rest of the word
Was today's silent e ever pronounced in the past
One piece of evidence is the spelling of old english words Using wrongly puts you on dangerous ground, because it implies something you don't actually want to say