On Wednesday 19 April 2006 14:33, Ron Johnson wrote: > On Wed, 2006-04-19 at 07:57 -0700, Paul Johnson wrote: > > On Wednesday 19 April 2006 07:00, Mike McCarty wrote: > > > Ron Johnson wrote: > > > > On Tue, 2006-04-18 at 13:50 -0500, Mike McCarty wrote: > > > >>No. If you look closely, you'll see that I put those symbols > > > >>inside of slash marks. That means that they are phonemes, > > > >>and the /j/ phoneme indicates a sound similar to the consonantal > > > >>"y" in English, as in "yet". As an example of another two words > > > > > > > > Oh, "j" like "jagermeister"? > > > > > > Yes, similar, except that should be "Jaegermeister". > > > > Nope, it's Jägermeister. It's one of my favorite drinks. > > How do you type "non-American Standard Code for Information Inter- > change" characters?
I do it using compose-character-"-a and can't remember how I do it in Windows...stupid alt codes... Besides, even the US uses UTF-8, ISO-8859-1 or -15 now. -- Paul Johnson Email and IM (XMPP & Google Talk): [EMAIL PROTECTED] Jabber: Because it's time to move forward http://ursine.ca/Ursine:Jabber
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