Re: [G] and [g] and PIE voiced plosives

From: Andrew Jarrette
Message: 63490
Date: 2009-02-27

--- In cybalist@yahoogroups.com, Rick McCallister <gabaroo6958@...> wrote:
>
>
>
>
> --- On Fri, 2/27/09, Andrew Jarrette <anjarrette@...> wrote:
>
> > From: Andrew Jarrette <anjarrette@...>
> > Subject: [tied] Re: [G] and [g] and PIE voiced plosives
> > To: cybalist@yahoogroups.com
> > Date: Friday, February 27, 2009, 10:21 AM
> > --- In cybalist@yahoogroups.com, "Richard
> > Wordingham"
> > <richard.wordingham@> wrote:
> > >
> > > --- In cybalist@yahoogroups.com, "Andrew
> > Jarrette" <anjarrette@> wrote:
> > > > --- In cybalist@yahoogroups.com,
> > "tgpedersen" <tgpedersen@> wrote:
> > >
> > > > > I read this at the website, where some of
> > your characters come out
> > > > > funny. One of your earlier postings I had to
> > give up making sense of
> > > > > because of that.
> > > >
> > > > I have to remember to set my character encoding
> > to unicode. For some
> > > > reason it always falls back to the default
> > "western", which I think is
> > > > the reason for the strange characters.
> > >
> > > If you post via the web interface (i.e. the archived
> > messages), what
> > > you send gets tagged as ISO-8859-1, without any useful
> > conversion of
> > > the bytes.
> > >
> > > Richard.
> > >
> > >
> >
> > Let me just test that: þ, é, ð, æ, æ.
> > How do these characters come out?
> >
> > Andrew
>
> Like shiznatz
>


They come out OK at the website if your character encoding is set to
unicode.

Andrew