German Keyboards have keys for the extra German characters of course.
You can use ALT + nnnn combinations otherwise.
ä = ALT 0228
ö = ALT 0246
ü = ALT 0252
Ä = ALT 0196
Ö = ALT 0214
Ü = ALT 0220
ß = ALT 0223 (or use ss instead Example Street = Straße or Strasse )
For a lowercase 'a' with an umlaut, hold down the alt key and press 0282 For an uppercase 'a' with an umlaut, hold down the alt key and press 0196
The cast of The Lives of Isis Umlaut - 2013 includes: Erica Genereux Smith as Isis Umlaut III
German has no umlaut on the letter e. Umlauts however differentiate pronunciations.
Umlaut.
Umlaut
Lars Umlaut is not real, he's a character in guitar hero. Lars Ulrich is the drummer for metallica.
nope
An umlaut is a diacritical mark placed over a letter consisting of two closely-placed dots. (¨) Or the sound produced by such a diacritical mark.
In German it is called an "umlaut", and it affects the way the vowel is pronounced. For example, an "O" with an umlaut over it is pronounced like double "O" in English. Thus: Flote (with an umlaut over the "o") is pronounced "Flute" in English.
Umlaut
It depends on the pronunciation guide. There is no standard in English for the use of the umlaut as a pronunciation indicator. It usually represents AH as in Father, or AY as in Day.
The correct spelling is Zürich. The umlaut implies a long 'u', Zure-rick, to rhyme with 'Sure'. Without the Umlaut it would be a short 'u', as in 'Surrey'.