← Back to context Comment by ccppurcell 15 hours ago Rock dots? You mean diacritics? Yeah someone invented them: the ancient Greeks, idiöt. 5 comments ccppurcell Reply RHSeeger 15 hours ago It's not the character, its the way / context in which it's usedhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metal_umlaut ccppurcell 14 hours ago I know what he was referring to. But the use case is obviously languages other than English, not the Motörhead fan club newsletter. topaz0 13 hours ago Some combination of people misunderstood some other people's joke, not totally clear which and which. chr 15 hours ago Yeah, that dude oughta read books and learn about computers, too. gerikson 13 hours ago And live in a country where they use these in their alphabets.
RHSeeger 15 hours ago It's not the character, its the way / context in which it's usedhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metal_umlaut ccppurcell 14 hours ago I know what he was referring to. But the use case is obviously languages other than English, not the Motörhead fan club newsletter.
ccppurcell 14 hours ago I know what he was referring to. But the use case is obviously languages other than English, not the Motörhead fan club newsletter.
topaz0 13 hours ago Some combination of people misunderstood some other people's joke, not totally clear which and which.
chr 15 hours ago Yeah, that dude oughta read books and learn about computers, too. gerikson 13 hours ago And live in a country where they use these in their alphabets.
It's not the character, its the way / context in which it's used
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metal_umlaut
I know what he was referring to. But the use case is obviously languages other than English, not the Motörhead fan club newsletter.
Some combination of people misunderstood some other people's joke, not totally clear which and which.
Yeah, that dude oughta read books and learn about computers, too.
And live in a country where they use these in their alphabets.