Date: 2017-11-25 12:32 am (UTC)
sauergeek: (Default)
From: [personal profile] sauergeek
...and Zaïre. I've seen the occasional umlaut in English, but I'd never really associated it with a glottal stop. I suspect this has to do with both English being — as should be expected — remarkably inconsistent about that usage, and speaking a bit of German.

I wonder if the umlaut is actually a glottal stop, and if it would work even if put above a consonant glottal stop. I somehow doubt it on both points. And yet, there it is, three different uses of an umlaut to indicate a glottal stop. Who ever said English was an unaccented language?
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