Малоизвестные факты о Ïàìÿòíèêè íà ìîãèëó ÑÂÎ â Ìîñêâå.
Малоизвестные факты о Ïàìÿòíèêè íà ìîãèëó ÑÂÎ â Ìîñêâå.
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Tool to translate Unicode codes. Unicode is a character encoding standard aiming to give every character a numeric identifier.
As for the sound of European Portuguese, it seems to be different. According to the chart here, it's a near-back vowel, not a central vowel. It's an unrounded version of the English "oo" in "hook". The barred-i is often used to transcribe it because it has no standard symbol in IPA.
Achieving this kind of speed, though, takes some knowledge of the tools my computer offers. I’ll apply that knowledge to the letters in the title of this blog post.
– Ñêîëüêî ëåò ìîæåò áûòü òàêîé ëîæêå? – ñïðîñèëè îíè. – Íå ìåíüøå äâóõñîò. Ïðèìåðíî â ýòî âðåìÿ ïîñëåäíèå ëþäè ïîêèíóëè Þïèòåð, è ìû îñòàëèñü îäíè. – À ïî÷åìó ëþäè íàñ áðîñèëè? – Íà íàøåé ïëàíåòå óñëîâèÿ äëÿ íèõ áûëè ñëèø êîì òÿæ¸ëûå. Îíè ìîãëè æèòü òîëüêî â ñêà- ôàíäðàõ. Íà ýòîì âîñïèòàòåëüíèöà õîòåëà çàêîí ÷èòü ðàç- ãî âîð, íî ìàëûøè íå îòñòàâàëè. Îíè çàñûïàëè å¸ âîïðîñàìè: – Çà÷åì æå ëþäè ñþäà ïðèëåòåëè? – À ÷òî îíè çäåñü äåëàëè? – Ñêîëüêî âðåìåíè îíè òóò áûëè? Âîñïèòàòåëüíèöå ïðèøëîñü ðàññêàçàòü îáî âñ¸ì ñ ñàìîãî íà÷àëà. – Ëþäè íàøëè íà Þïèòåðå íóæíûå èì âåùåñòâà. Îíè äîáûâàëè èõ è îòïðàâëÿëè íà Çåìëþ. Íî ñàìè îíè íè÷åãî íå ìîãëè äåëàòü. Èì ïîìîãàëè ðîáîòû. À ïîòîì ëþäè íàó÷èëèñü ïîëó÷àòü íà Çåìëå òå âåùåñòâà, êîòîðûå îíè äîáûâàëè çäåñü. Òîãäà îíè áðîñèëè íàñ è âåðíóëèñü íà Çåìëþ. – Íó, à äàëüøå? – Ñàìè çíàåòå. Ìû íå ïîãèáëè, à íàó÷èëèñü ðàçìíîæàòüñÿ, ñòàëè åù¸ ñîâåðøåííåå.
It's definitely more closed than Russian ы (which is relatively open and 'bright' compared to probably most of the analogues), but compares quite well to the Estonian counterpart.
Время насквозь времени приходится сталкиваться с текстом в непонятной кодировке, типа такого:
Âñ¸ áûëî áóêâàëüíî íà ãðàíè êàòàñòðîôû. Íî ðÿäîì áûëè öâåòû â ãîðøêàõ, è íåîáîææ¸ííûå ñîñíû, è òðóùèåñÿ î íîãè ñîáàêè, è ðåñòîðàí, îòêðûòûé äëÿ óæèíà; è ÷óâñòâîâàëîñü, ÷òî âñå íà óëèöå âçäûõàþò ñ áëàãîäàðíîñòüþ çà òî, ÷òî âñ¸ ýòî ó íèõ åù¸ åñòü. Õîòÿ áû íåíàäîëãî (Äèàíà Ìàðêóì, Äåñÿòûé îñòðîâ).
@alessio1 Ïàìÿòíèêè íà ìîãèëó ÑÂÎ â Ìîñêâå There can also Be some exception, bc in the past from what I know the rules were different, and also some family names, for example my family name is Pîrvu, written with î in the middle of the word ^^
This means that the key labels don’t correspond to the characters they actually produce. However, muscle memory developed over a decade of typing on French keyboards means I quickly find the French characters I want.
PS on the English wikipedia the article on the Romanian Cyrillic alphabet (i.e. the one in use before 1860), they show a correspondance between the two letters, so the sound they render must a least be very alike; my question is: is it the same?
I spoke with people about this and they tell me that this delay means it’s quicker to just use the ALT keyboard combinations. These people often have unsightly, aging notes taped to their computers as quick reminders of the combinations.
Thomas1 said: Thank you, OldAvatar. So if I understand you correctly they actually are graphically different today but they used to be put down as the same letter in the past. They underwent a graphic alteration retaining their phonetic alikeness. That's very interesting!
Turkish ı ought to be like the Japanese 'u' sound (I don't know Japanese kana so I can't write it out)
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