It would be nice to have something that works really well in International English, and that sounded good to Asians as well. Chinese friends inform me that they sometimes have troubole with words/part words that end in R
My Indian friends for the most part would have no trouble saying the name (though it may mean little to them having no immeadiate English cognate) - most of their languages and dialects are very rich in sounds that many other ethnicities can barely even distinguish. I speak some French and Spanish and it rolls of my toungue beautifully especially in Spanish. I really believe that this will prove more important than some have yet thought. Corporations have been known to invest millions on this one thng alone - I kid you not! Serious research/thought would be really worthwhile - esp if there is someone on the list with relevent background. Why not languagae Group Names? Romance Languages: LibreOffice International English: FreeOffice Mandarin: Office-免费 Paul On 13 October 2010 10:28, Friedrich Strohmaier <damokles4-lis...@bits-fritz.de> wrote: > Hi Christoph, *, > > Christoph Noack schrieb: >>Am Dienstag, den 12.10.2010, 23:01 +0200 schrieb Friedrich Strohmaier: > >>> Finally there will be several flavors of pronunciation - and good >>> moments if they meat each other! :o)) >> ^^^^ > >>I hope this was just a typo ;-))) > > Oh, yes and indeed one of my top ten! :o))) > > Thanks for proof reading that attentive! > > > Gruß/regards > -- > Friedrich > > Ansprechpartner / contact person for the "PrOOo-Box" > german language "best Office Suite ever" and more on CD/DVD > http://prooo-box.org -- footer updated on 2010-10-07 > > > -- > To unsubscribe, e-mail to discuss+h...@documentfoundation.org > All messages you send to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be > deleted. > List archives are available at > http://www.documentfoundation.org/lists/discuss/ > > -- To unsubscribe, e-mail to discuss+h...@documentfoundation.org All messages you send to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted. List archives are available at http://www.documentfoundation.org/lists/discuss/