Ujumbe: 17
Lugha: English
ganymeder (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 12 Machi 2009 1:51:27 alasiri
In "Mi estas komencanto" lesson 6, it says that when spelling out something you just say the letter as it is pronounced in esperanto. So if you spell out your email address, it would sound as each individual letter sounds in Esperanto. But the problem is that Esperanto does not use all the English letters. My email has a "Y" in it. What am I supposed to say?
Dankon!
Oŝo-Jabe (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 12 Machi 2009 1:57:24 alasiri
jchthys (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 12 Machi 2009 11:24:02 alasiri
erinja (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2009 1:13:48 asubuhi
"Vavo" is a common alternative for W. I have never heard Y called anything but "ipsilono".
KoLonJaNo (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2009 3:17:35 asubuhi
jchthys:And there are variants, such as "vo germana" (w), and I think "i greka" (y).Decades ago when I started learning Esperanto, w was ĝermana (!) vo.
It seems vavo has become increasingly popular along with the rise of the Web and the need to pronounce www fast enough.
I greka, on the other hand, is used e.g. in French and Russian. The name is confusing since there is actually a letter I (iota) in the Greek alphabet.
Ύ ψιλόν is the name of Y in the Greek alphabet itself, so ipsilono seems to be the natural choice.
Kolonjano
Rogir (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2009 3:20:13 alasiri
KoLonJaNo (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2009 5:45:31 alasiri
Rogir:And what about the names for ß, ö, æ, ø, å, ç, or cyrillic letters?That is an interesting question which you might ask in the German, French, Russian and Scandinavian forums as well.
According to the last page of [1]:
- names of letters that are part of the German alphabet but not the Esperanto one:
q = kuo
w = ĝermana vo
x = ikso
y = ipsilono
- umlauts:
ä = a tremao (explicitly mentioned)
ö = o tremao (by analogy)
ü = u tremao (by analogy)
- special German letter ß:
not in [1], but in [2]:
"Eszett n ein Graphem des deutschen Alphabets (Buchstabe ß) esceto"
According to Esperanto Wikipedia sozo may be used, too.
- other letters mentioned in [1]:
ø = o trastreko
ç = c subhoko or c cedilo
Kolonjano
[1] KRAUSE, Erich-Dieter: Wörterbuch Deutsch-Esperanto. 2., durchges. Aufl. Leipzig usw.: Langenscheidt 1993.
[2] KRAUSE, Erich-Dieter: Großes Wörterbuch Deutsch-Esperanto. Hamburg: Buske 2007.
henma (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2009 6:16:01 alasiri
KoLonJaNo:Decades ago when I started learning Esperanto, w was ĝermana (!) vo.Oh, Kolonjano, I don't think you are that old, as to have been a "ĝermano" instead of a "germano" when you started learning Esperanto!!!
On the other hand, thanks a lot for all this interesting information...
Have you also the name for our ñ, by any chance?
Amike,
Daniel.
darkweasel (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2009 7:51:04 alasiri
KoLonJaNo:Which, however, may well cause confusion with the actual sequence of "sz" (so zo). I think "esceto" is a good word for ß.
According to Esperanto Wikipedia sozo may be used, too.
... and now we'll see people discussing about ð, ø, æ and who-knows-what-else-letters.
henma: You may try "no tilda", since the name for a tilde is "tildo"
jchthys (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2009 8:32:07 alasiri
darkweasel:That's the point: the German eszett is literally "es-zed". Historically, the letter is a ſs (or ſz) ligature, ſ being the archaic non-final s.KoLonJaNo:According to Esperanto Wikipedia sozo may be used, too.Which, however, may well cause confusion with the actual sequence of "sz" (so zo). I think "esceto" is a good word for ß.