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On the french layout keyboard (aka azerty), there's a key only dedicated to this ù According to gelb 1961, the famous sumerian sign é ("house, building") was originally pronounced /ħa/ (or ḥa in semiticist transcription) We were wondering if there are any other languages that is using the character
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Answers given by others are fine, but i'd like to add the tidbit that while <µ> is not at all related to <u>, the modern latin letters u, v, y, w all derive from the greek letter <υ>. For example, fine might be written fínė, such that í = aɪ and a. In sumerian (and thus akkadian, hittite, etc) cuneiform, there are often several glyphs which have the same pronunciation (as far as we can tell)
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So the glyphs pronounced /u/ will be transliterate.
Most often, the expression “false cognate” is used as a synonym for “false friend” If you google with them, you will mostly find pages that use them synonymously The problem is, there is no official spelling because there is no official language Alsatian is a german dialect spoken in what is nowadays france, influenced more or less,.
As opposed to à, è, ì, ò, ù, and so on In linguistics, i've always seen the term stressed be used in this context Its opposite would be unstressed Does there exist a phonetic english alphabet constructed from standard english letters plus diacritical marks

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