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- 1995 March 4th (4:49am), “Anton Sherwood” (user name), rec.heraldry (Usenet newsgroup), “Re: Bohemian heraldry”, Message ID: <[email protected]>
- Yeah but I just read (on the LINGUIST mailing list, i think) that the Czechs, or should I say C^echs, changed from +z forms to haczek forms recently enough that family names may well be spelt both ways.
- 1995 August 17th, “Julian Pardoe LADS LDN X1428” (user name), sci.lang (Usenet newsgroup), “Re: Comparison of languages for CS1 and CS2”, Message ID: <[email protected]>#1/1
- ‘Cz’, ‘sz’ and ‘zs’ (zh) are equivalent to ‘c’-haczek, ‘s’-haczek and ‘z’-haczek when accented characters are mot available. “'” is the “separator” and makes two letters keep the values they have in isolation, where otherwise they’d affect each other. Hence it mostly corresponds to the hard sign. However, when haczeks are not used it has other uses: Luz'skij (rajon) = Luz + skij, Richard fon Vajc'zekker (former(?) president of the FRG).
- 1995 November 22nd, “Anton Sherwood” (user name), sci.lang (Usenet newsgroup), “Re: mystery letter: R-grave”, Message ID: <[email protected]>#1/1
- To expand a bit, WordPerfect’s Character Set 1 includes these modified Rs:
168 R acute 0154 Unicode
169 r acute 0155
170 R haczek 0158
171 r haczek 0159
172 R cedilla 0156
173 r cedilla 0157
218 R grave
219 r grave
- 1996 August 13th, “Robert” (user name), comp.fonts (Usenet newsgroup), “Q(PostScript): ISO Latin 2”, Message ID: <[email protected]>#1/1
- For the lower-case t-, l-, and d- haczek, I intend to use the apostrophe, appropriately positioned; for the d-stroke of Croatian, I intend to use the macron or n-dash (whatever the font-designer regarded as appropriate), unless the font-designer felt it was more appropriate to actually DRAW the additional marks for these characters.
- 1996 August 28th, “Robert S Kissel” (user name), comp.lang.postscript (Usenet newsgroup), “Q: Latin-2 Metrics”, Message ID: <[email protected]>#1/1
- I know how to use the techniques in the RedBook, to extend the CharStrings dictionary of the built-in fonts (Times, Times-Bold, Courier, Helvetica, etc.) — what I need is a reasonable set of metrics, so that, for instance, I can position, for each font, the ogonek with respect to the a and the e, or an apostrophe, to form a Czech t or d with “haczek” and so on.
- 1996 September 9th, “Poll Dubh” (user name), sci.lang (Usenet newsgroup), “Re: Accent marks, French and otherwise”, Message ID: <[email protected]>#1/1
- In some cases the accent developed out of a digraph in which the second letter came to be written above the first. I think this is the case of the French circumflex (superscripted “s”), the Czech etc. haczek (superscripted “z”), the German Umlaut (superscripted “e”), the Spanish tilda (superscripted “n” — or was it “h”?), and many others.
- 1996 October 1st, “Julian Pardoe LADS LDN X1428” (user name), sci.lang (Usenet newsgroup), “Re: Burmese by any other name…”, Message ID: <[email protected]>#1/1
- In modern Czech the sound /tS/ is spelt “c”-caron. (A caron or hachek or haczek is like an inverted circumflex).
- 1997 May 25th, “Hans-Christian Holm” (user name), sci.lang (Usenet newsgroup), “Czech r^ (Was: Re: Arabic ‘L’)”, Message ID: <[email protected]>#1/1
- I’ve always thought that the Czech sound which is written as r with a haczek above is considered the world’s “rarest sound” (if it’s possible for such a thing to exist).
- 1998 August 18th, “Gabrielle Lawson” (user name), alt.startrek.creative (Usenet newsgroup), “NEW: DS9 Oswiecim 0/42 [PG-13 Violence]”, Message ID: <[email protected]>
- An S-set (don’t yell at me in German if I wrote that wrong) is now B since it looks rather like a B anyway. And the C-haczek is now “CZ” just to set it apart from the C in Czech.
- 1998 August 18th, “Gabrielle Lawson” (user name), alt.startrek.creative (Usenet newsgroup), “NEW: DS9 Oswiecim 40/42 [PG-13 Violence]”, Message ID: <[email protected]>
- “V-l-a, with an accent mark, d, with a haczek, a.”
- 1999 March 4th, “Chris S.” (user name), sci.lang (Usenet newsgroup), “Sicilian”, Message ID: <[email protected]>#1/1
- This sounds like the R with the haczek that is found in Czech… but unvoiced… is it?
- 2000 March 5th, “Hans-Christian Holm” (user name), sci.lang (Usenet newsgroup), “Re: Pronunciation of hr and chr in Czech?”, Message ID: <[email protected]>#1/1
- The haczek letters are related to those without, but that’s another story. (To start with, the r/r^, d/d^ and t/t^ pairs are not related in the same way as c/c^, s/s^ and z/z^, and … oh well, I’ll leave that for now…)
- 2000 March 29th, “Uncle Davey” (user name), soc.culture.esperanto (Usenet newsgroup), “Re: Nova grupo <angl-esper-instru>”, Message ID: <[email protected]>#1/1
- In Polish your ch is cz, in Hungarian cs, in Czech, Slovak and most latinate South Slav languages it is c with a haczek.
- 2002 January 27th (7:12pm), “Joseph M. Newcomer” (user name), microsoft.public.vc.mfc (Usenet newsgroup), “Re: Change code page to print ASCII characters in ListBox”, Message ID: <[email protected]>
- ASCII 219 is a U with a haczek character (like a pointing uparrow), the character Û. If you think this should be displayed as some other kind of character, you need to select the correct font first.
- 2002 April 12th (10:56pm), “Uncle Davey” (user name), alt.language.artificial (Usenet newsgroup), “Re: Pan-Slavic language (Was: Re: Pro-verbs (not ‘Proverbs’)?)”, Message ID: <[email protected]>
- I was gonna leave letters with haczeks off, i must admit. They make the whole thing harder for people who are not unicode masters like yourself.
- 2003 February 18th (9:13pm), “Maciej St. Zieba” (user name), sci.lang (Usenet newsgroup), “Re: Arabic writing of some names”, Message ID: <[email protected]>
- “Rz” is not used for transcription – except that it used to be used for transcribing Czech r-haczek (which is not the same sond, anyhow).
- 2003 May, Oscar E. Swan, A Grammar of Contemporary Polish (Slavica; →ISBN, 9780893572969) page 11
- The names for the other diacritics are: ogonek ‘tail’ or haczek ‘hook’