Hold down the Alt key and type 139
The two dots above a letter, you mean, would be called a diaeresis and/or an umlaut.
Umlauts
In pharmacy, a "T" with a dot over it denotes "one tablet." Two "Ts"l with 2 dots on top represent 2 tablets.
it has adkdgbsgbsd'g SD
Two dots over a vowel is normally called a dieresis. There is a special case of the dieresis in German where the two dots cause the vowel to change (sound and meaning): this special case is called umlaut.
dieresis
10 is two lines 11 is one dot over two lines 12 is two dots over two lines etc... 20 is one dot over a shell. 21 is one dot over one dot 22 is one dot over two dots etc... 39 is one dot over four dots over three lines 40 is two dots over a shell 41 is two dots over one dot 42 is two dots over two dots etc... 60 is three dots over a shell etc... 80 is four dots over a shell etc... 100 is a line over a shell The Mayan number system is a base-20 system. A dot is 1, a line is 5, and up to 19 you can write in one "digit". As soon as the number increases over 20, it goes up into the second "digit" and you stack a dot (this time multiplied by 20) over a shell shape (worth zero). It's just like our number system, except our number system uses a base-10 system.
I think the two dots are an umlaut. In that cas it is pronunced as if there were an e after the a. 'Staer'
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
The separation or resolution of one syllable into two; -- the opposite of synaeresis., A mark consisting of two dots [/], placed over the second of two adjacent vowels, to denote that they are to be pronounced as distinct letters; as, cooperate, aerial., Same as Diaeresis.
Hold down the Alt key and type 139
== == Three dots are ellipses, meaning that something is left out. If you combine ellipses with a period, then that would leave four dots... meaning that something is left out, and then it ends.
beautiful in German = schon (the 'o' has two dots over it)
It is spelled "Loïc" in French with the two dots over the "i" called a diaeresis.
There is two dots above the Mn, there your two S dots
Two dots in Morse Code is the letter I (i).