Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would definitely use the umlaut. Zoë.
Not if you live in an English speaking country. The *diaereses* (see, we can’t even agree on what they are called because they are not used in English) don’t exist in English and no one will use them. They don’t mean anything to the vast majority of people in the US. As someone else wrote, you don’t give into morons - you teach them.
It's funny to see someone calling other people morons while also saying diaereses don't exist in English. They're uncommon but they absolutely do exist. Zoë is one example.
What English words (not “foreign” names) use the diaereses?
Anonymous wrote:Elizabeth.
Don’t make your daughter Zoe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would definitely use the umlaut. Zoë.
Not if you live in an English speaking country. The *diaereses* (see, we can’t even agree on what they are called because they are not used in English) don’t exist in English and no one will use them. They don’t mean anything to the vast majority of people in the US. As someone else wrote, you don’t give into morons - you teach them.
Diareses do exist in English. Do you not see that your last two sentences are contradictory?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would definitely use the umlaut. Zoë.
Not if you live in an English speaking country. The *diaereses* (see, we can’t even agree on what they are called because they are not used in English) don’t exist in English and no one will use them. They don’t mean anything to the vast majority of people in the US. As someone else wrote, you don’t give into morons - you teach them.
It's funny to see someone calling other people morons while also saying diaereses don't exist in English. They're uncommon but they absolutely do exist. Zoë is one example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would definitely use the umlaut. Zoë.
Not if you live in an English speaking country. The *diaereses* (see, we can’t even agree on what they are called because they are not used in English) don’t exist in English and no one will use them. They don’t mean anything to the vast majority of people in the US. As someone else wrote, you don’t give into morons - you teach them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would definitely use the umlaut. Zoë.
Not if you live in an English speaking country. The *diaereses* (see, we can’t even agree on what they are called because they are not used in English) don’t exist in English and no one will use them. They don’t mean anything to the vast majority of people in the US. As someone else wrote, you don’t give into morons - you teach them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Zoë.
It looks incomplete otherwise and is not complicated to type.
Please point to the diaeresis/umlat key on your standard American keyboard.
Anonymous wrote:I would definitely use the umlaut. Zoë.
Anonymous wrote:The dots are kind of weird right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Zoe. No question.
+1
We have a Zoe. Unless you are European and frequently in a country where various accents are common it doesn’t seem necessary.