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I find there's always one example, where there might be confusion if the ß no longer existed. We have the mathematical designations "Masse" (weighting) and "Maße" (dimensions). So no one would know what is meant by both.
Oh dang, I had no idea. Got one OVR kit, HONEY/MODEXTRA150/OVR. As long as it has both R2 keys I'm still good...
You'll always find examples for anything, but in real life it wouldn't really matter.
http://www.duden.de/sprachwissen/rechts ... scharfes-sRechtschreib-Duden wrote: Regel 160:
[…]
2. Auch bei Verwendung von Großbuchstaben steht SS für ß <§ 25 E3>.
STRASSE, AUSSEN, FUSSBALL
Use it, and it exists.Die Geschäftsführerin des Rates für deutsche Rechtschreibung Dr. Kerstin Güthert begründet die Haltung des Rates zum großen ß mit den Worten: „Es ist […] eine Frage, die schon seit Jahrzehnten unbeantwortet ist und es wohl auch auf geraume Zeit auch bleiben wird. Der Grund liegt darin, dass es dem Rat für deutsche Rechtschreibung nicht zusteht, Schriftzeichen zu erfinden. Seine Aufgabe ist es, die Schreibung zu beobachten und darauf zu achten, dass Regeln und Schreibgebrauch sich im Einklang befinden. Es bedarf also einer Initiative aus der Schreibgemeinschaft (z. B. vonseiten der Typografen), um hier auf der Basis eines gesellschaftlichen Konsens Abhilfe zu schaffen.“
I think it is a bad idea to confront beginners with the ß-ligature. Teach them that it is a sharp s and let them write ss. The ß-ligature is in fact a relic from the time when German texts had been set in Fraktur. The long s (looks like an f without the dash, or in fact the left half ofß) and ß had been carried over to Antiqua. While the long s has been dropped a long time ago, the ß is still there and troubles the bot (along its friends øçéêèæåäëïöüłż ...).Muirium wrote:When I was learning German, I remember being freaked out the first time I saw ß. WTF is that!? How many more additional letters do they have? Sound the alarm! Fortunately, you guys only really have that one. (And the Swiss, very sensibly, nixed it.) Umlauts aren't so bad. We English speakers generally just plough through foreign words with diacriticals anyway. Whatever the damage! This works especially well in diacritical crazy Turkish.
So yeah I sympathise with your Asian manufacturer. Be pleased they were creative enough to turn to Greek instead of doing the obvious and going for capital B. I think I remember seeing that exact thing done in German class once, as whoever typed it had no idea whatsoever how to enter eszett and didn't know what it meant either.
Now, about those schokoladen…
Those are perfect!
that`s a nice snappy sentence to sum up all this "ß"...ReALLY WaNT THiS? SCHEIßE!
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