German sharp S uppercase mapping
Steffen Nurpmeso
steffen at sdaoden.eu
Mon Dec 2 14:15:44 CST 2024
David Starner via Unicode wrote in
<CAMZ=zj4R0fo-6eTHXnH-8jv3uuhQ_kd2ZR_MSf2GENtTfmPGog at mail.gmail.com>:
|On Sun, Dec 1, 2024 at 12:35 PM Markus Scherer via Unicode
|<unicode at corp.unicode.org> wrote:
...
|[.]Searching Books for Der
|große Gatsby shows 12 or 13 distinct covers, 6 with DER (or Der)
|GROSSE GATSBY on the cover, three with DER (or Der) GROẞE GATSBY, and
|4 with lowercase titles. A few dated back to 2006, so it's not a
|trivial sample of modern covers.
And please do not use that book as an example, it surely was
mentioned maliciously given that it is a short book that flies by
in a rush, as in a state of euphoria, or better even intoxication.
It is an examplary of anglo-saxon lifestyle, and even though
Germany has become a hundred percent vassal that throws much more
money over the ocean for false things than is healthy or advisable
(just to name Monsanto), under the surface there is a long
history that points to different things.
|The standard is written in English . If you have trouble understanding
|a particular section, read it again and again and again . . . Sit up
|straight. Eat your vegetables. Do not mumble. -- _Pascal_, ISO 7185
|(1991)
Ah! I see. No gotos.
--steffen
|
|Der Kragenbaer, The moon bear,
|der holt sich munter he cheerfully and one by one
|einen nach dem anderen runter wa.ks himself off
|(By Robert Gernhardt)
|
|And in Fall, feel "The Dropbear Bard"s ball(s).
|
|The banded bear
|without a care,
|Banged on himself for e'er and e'er
|
|Farewell, dear collar bear
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