Speaking? I don't really think the vast majority cares that much about speaking, let alone speaking with correct vowel lenghts. In that regard normal accents may be much more useful to know.I would suggest you get into the habit of marking macrons, or at least learning which vowels are long. Otherwise later on you will find poetry (and speaking) difficult.
NefasSpeaking? I don't really think the vast majority cares that much about speaking, let alone speaking with correct vowel lenghts.
Thank you for that! This will make it easy. I was writing everything by hand, so I can move away from that nowThat's an option, but not what I had in mind.
In vim, it's problematic to use system keyboard layouts. If the same character is associated with different keys in different layouts, the behaviour of vim will depend on the layout and this can't be fixed by means of remappings. Vim doesn't take key codes into account.
Keymaps are an internal mechanism emulating keyboard layouts. They don't effect the normal mode. Keymaps are defined in files like this:
Here I remap brackets and braces to æ and â and swap k and q. (I always swap these letters for Romance languages.) If this keymap is saved as ~/.vim/keymaps/la.vim, it can be loaded by :set kmp=la and toggled by C-^. The bindings are only used for inserting the text, normal mode bindings remain intact and so do insert mode bindings with modifiers (e. g. C-[ works as before).Code:scriptencoding utf-8 let b:keymap_name = "æâ" loadkeymap [ æ { Æ ] â } Â k q K Q q k Q K
It's simple, so it's easy to be creative.
In Emacs the idea is more or less the same.
Oddly enough, I actually want to speak it... No one in my life knows Latin, so I guess I'll be talking to myself ha, but it does help me to memorize and learn better if I sound things out. Maybe I'll eventually find a little Latin group to speak it with online. I would say in my area, but chances are low on that...Speaking? I don't really think the vast majority cares that much about speaking, let alone speaking with correct vowel lenghts. In that regard normal accents may be much more useful to know.
Thank you anyway on that!Probably I could teach you how to edit XKB layouts, but if you do it cleanly, the changes are not seen by keyboard switchers. And XKB is a pain. And I'm not even sure you're on Linux.
I'm afraid, vim itself isn't quite easy.This will make it easy.
Thanks for the heads up. I am not very technical, but I have a resident techie, so hopefully this will get me there I'm done with the hand-cramping from writing everything out, so I'm quite motivated!I'm afraid, vim itself isn't quite easy.
Thank you! This is very helpful. I clicked on the link and dowloaded it, but it said "App not available." Maybe I need to install AutoHotKey first. I will work on this tonight.I thought that if you were on Windows, AutoHotkey might be the easiest option. Here is an example script: THREAD: macrons-how-to-write-them Hopefully, it still works. You install AutoHotkey, save the script as e. g. lat.ahk, and launch the script by a double click. The lines of the script define replacements: while it is running, a-slash is turned into ā, etc. That particular script can be paused by Win+Esc. The icon appears in the tray, it can be used to stop the script.
There are quite a few Latin Podcasts now. There is also an online Latin speaking group which convenes twice weekly in the US.Oddly enough, I actually want to speak it... No one in my life knows Latin, so I guess I'll be talking to myself ha, but it does help me to memorize and learn better if I sound things out. Maybe I'll eventually find a little Latin group to speak it with online. I would say in my area, but chances are low on that...
I also know of mȳthos (greek borrowing) but otherwise I can't think of any.Yes, that's exactly what I meant. The last pair only occurs in borrowings, so I separated them. Off the top of my head, I can think of only one word with ȳ: būtȳrum "butter'; in oryza "rice" it's short: [oryzza].
Good to know, thank you. I will look into this when I'm further along and can carry a conversation, or even attempt toThere are quite a few Latin Podcasts now. There is also an online Latin speaking group which convenes twice weekly in the US.
Thank you very much! That makes sense.Probably that file, Latina.rar, is bitrotten, it's nine years old. Yes, AutoHotkey is installed separately: https://www.autohotkey.com/ It's the engine. You can create the file lat.ahk in the Notepad and paste all the replacements into it, i. e. :*?C:a/::ā etc. I guess, after that you'll be able to run the file by a double click. A green icon with H should appear in the tray.
Which version of Windows do you run? I just add the keyboard layout for Māori, and I can type macrons in Windows 10. Press the key on the left on your number 1 key (in an English keyboard, it’s likely to be the tilde key) and then just type the vowel you want. Then a vowel with a macro would appear. It functions in the same way as the accents on Spanish keyboard. I’m sure that you can have one for Windows 7 as well.Thank you very much! That makes sense.
A delayed thank you! I have a mac, but I figured out how to do this on a mac: https://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/~tetaka/PDF/Macron Vowels on a Mac 10.6-7.pdfWhich version of Windows do you run? I just add the keyboard layout for Māori, and I can type macrons in Windows 10. Press the key on the left on your number 1 key (in an English keyboard, it’s likely to be the tilde key) and then just type the vowel you want. Then a vowel with a macro would appear. It functions in the same way as the accents on Spanish keyboard. I’m sure that you can have one for Windows 7 as well.