[bksvol-discuss] Re: necessity of diacritical marks in foreign words or names

  • From: Dasha Radford <dasha95@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx" <bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 9 Nov 2012 21:49:08 -0500

Also keep them and if you are using a screenreader  or if said hypothetical 
person reading it said a hypothetical book is using a screen reader. 
Screenreader  over shall we say most decent screen reader  know what 
diacritical marks are and will respond accordingly without them you have no 
idea what you would get on pronunciation.

Sent from my iPhone

On Nov 9, 2012, at 8:33 PM, Ali Al-hajamy <aalhajamy@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Not disruptive in the slightest. How important you think they are depends on 
> the person reading the book, but I'd recommend keeping them in, because they 
> help with pronunciations in the event that you should have to read the book 
> aloud. it's especially useful in DAISY rather than Braille, because in most 
> cases, the Braille translators used to open the BRF files interpret any marks 
> as acute or grave accent signs, even if they aren't, and in rare cases render 
> the book unreadable, whereas if you read the XML that comes with the DAISY 
> files, the signs will read as they are supposed to. In one extreme instance, 
> in Jaroslav HaÅek's The Good Soldier Åvejk and his fortunes in the world war, 
> every time the special S character that you see in Svejk or Hasek appears in 
> the book, which is very, very often in this novel (I don't know if it looks 
> different to the sighted reader, but a screenreader reads it with an "sh" 
> sound, something which also appears at the end of the name of Danilo KiÅ), in 
> the Braille copy it would show up as many garbled characters, but when I 
> switched to the DAISY and read the XML file, it was fine.
> 
> Tl;dr version: keep them. They don't get in the way and can be helpful.
> 
> On 09-Nov-12 20:11, Cindy Rosenthal wrote:
>> 
>> How important, or, conversely, disruptive to reading by non-sighted members 
>> is the use of diacritical marks like acute, grave, or umlauts (sp.?) in 
>> foreign words and names?
>> If the scanner did not put them in must the proofer?
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