Um. i don't know how to make an i with dots but i can do this Alt+142=Ä and Alt+148=ö hope that that helps you out
you join the dots without lifting your pen.
Anywhere you like!
To check if your number is a square number, draw little dots. like, for 4 it will 2 dots by 2 dots. if this doesn't work equally, it is not a square number.
Dots? Like in a book or a song book? In a book it represents the beginning of a new day or different time.
The Romans had a separate system for fractions based on 12 (like a clock). The fractions were made up from dots and the letter S. S =1/2 and each dot was 1/12. Dots alone represented 1/12 (.) to 5/12 (::.) , S was 6/12, S and dots represented 7/12 (S.) to 11/12 (S::.) and I was one.
The letter "Ä, ä" is spoken just like the a in the word "Mac".
It means therefore
The two dots above an "a" that make a short "o" sound are called a diaeresis or umlaut. It indicates that the vowel should be pronounced separately and not combined with the preceding vowel.
It's a different letter altogether. "Ä" is pronounced very much like the "a" in "cat" or "tag", for example.
It is known as an umlauts. It is not used in English, but is used over a vowel, especially in German, to indicate a different vowel quality.
o=c=s with 2 pairs of unshaired electrons on s and o
above are examples. You need a y and x axis (labelled), data (dots) and the data joined up by a line. Like a scatter graph but with the dots joined up
fruite, dots taste like fruite, if you mean pacman dots, and if realy you mean dots as in whats on paper, ink, yuek! note: dots realy taste like ink
Me* pelqen. or Te* kam enqef. At least that's how i would say it *e with two dots above it.
It depends on what langauge you are talking about. If you mean German: ä: pronounce it like the "a" in ham ö: pronounce it like the "ur" in murder ü: has no equivalent in English but can be described as pronouncing the sound ee with rounded lips. If you mean Russian: ё: pronounced like "yo" or "oh" If you mean French: vowels with two dots above them do not change in pronunciation. The dots just mean that the vowel is separate from the previous vowel, such as naïve.
Do you mean, one dot above two dots? If that's what you intended, it means "therefore." I don't think ever seen two dots above one dot... wikipedia article on this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therefore_sign
You don't use slashes when typing your birthday on a German website. You should try using dots instead. Like, I was born November 17th 1990, I would type 17.11.1990 (day.month.year)