Einde O'Callaghan <einde.ocallaghan@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> vertelde ons
>Sidheseeker wrote:
>> Einde O'Callaghan <einde.ocallaghan@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>
>>>Sidheseeker wrote:
>>>
>>>>WCB <republican@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>On 14 Jul 2004 21:45:02 -0700, nitromill@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(Evan-Josh
Roose)
>>>>>wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>They're the little people.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>>Where do they come from?
>>>>>
>>>>>Tyr nan Og.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Really..????
>>>>
>>>>and I always thought that was Tir na nOg
>>>>
>>>
>>>The place is called Tír na nÓg (the Land of the Young - usually
>>>trsanslated as the land of Youth),
>>
>>
>> Hmm.. seems I missed the fada on the ó.. (can't do caps) anyway
>> you rarely see it written that way..
>>
>You certainly do in Irish - but in English it's true that it's often
>written Tir na nOg. I wasn't implying any criticism of you spelling,as
>you were quite correct to move the "n".
>
>Slán, Einde O'Callaghan
>
>PS BTW you can get the "fada" on capitals in Windows: Á = Alt-0211, É =
>Alt-0201, Í = Alt-0205, Ó = Alt-0211 and Ú = Alt-0218.
When you use the US-international keyboard it is even easier. Just use
the accents as the are and the letter after that. So accent +a gives
á, accent + A gives Á and so on. ^ + o gives ô, " + e gives ë, ~ + n
gives ñ, ` + u gives ù. It does also capitals. ÀÒÌÙ`YÈ ÔÎ etc.
--
Raffinement 'n gave


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