umlauting

listen to the pronunciation of umlauting
English - English
present participle of umlaut
umlaut
An assimilatory process whereby a vowel is pronounced more like a following vocoid that is separated by one or more consonants
umlaut
The diacritical mark ( ¨ ) placed over a vowel to indicate such assimilation
umlaut
The umlaut process (as above) that occurred historically in Germanic languages whereby back vowels became front vowels when followed by syllable containing a front vocoid (e.g. Germanic lūsi > Old English līs(i) > Modern English lice)
umlaut
a diacritical mark (two dots) placed over a vowel in German to indicate a change in sound
umlaut
To place an umlaut over a vowel
umlaut
Two horizontal dots over a letter, as in German Köpfe The umlaut is not distinguished from the diaeresis in the Unicode character encoding (See diaeresis )
umlaut
A vowel so assimilated
umlaut
{i} diacritical mark (two dots) above a vowel indicating a change in the sound of a vowel, vowel altered in such a way
umlaut
The assimilation - through fronting, backing, raising, or lowering - of a class of vowels to a set of segments in an immediately neighboring syllable e g , PGmc *fulljan- > OE fyllan 'fill', PGmc *gulda > OE gold, OHG furi > NHG für 'for'
umlaut
An umlaut is a symbol that is written over vowels in German and some other languages to indicate the way in which they should be pronounced. For example, the word `für' has an umlaut over the `u'. a sign (¨) written over a German vowel to show how it is pronounced (um- + laut )
umlaut
The euphonic modification of a root vowel sound by the influence of a, u, or especially i, in the syllable which formerly followed
umlaut
A process whereby a vowel is pronounced more like a vowel or semivowel in a following syllable
umlaut
A partial assimilation of a vowel