| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 724.1 |  | COOKIE::DEVINE | Bob Devine, CXN | Wed Sep 27 1989 22:27 | 1 | 
|  |     There's also "residuum".
 | 
| 724.2 | uum | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Wed Sep 27 1989 22:40 | 9 | 
|  |     Interesting too ...
    
    vacuum is pronounced vac-youm
    
    whereas continuum is pronounced contin-you-um
    
    so maybe should be spelled contin�um to indicate that the letters
    should be pronounced individually
    
 | 
| 724.3 | I know I'll never find another 'u'. | PROXY::CANTOR | Hide, Cecil, here comes Uncle Captain! | Thu Sep 28 1989 06:37 | 7 | 
|  | Re .2
Shouldn't the mark be on the second vowel of the pair?  
I've heard 'vacuum' pronounced as vac-you-um, too.
Dave C.
 | 
| 724.4 | When I walk through that door 'u''ll be my guide | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Fri Sep 29 1989 20:40 | 16 | 
|  |     re .3
    
    I suppose it should really, but I always treat the umlaut as meaning
    "for this vowel pair, pronounce them separately", so it then doesn't
    matter which it goes on.
    
    Anyway, I prefer the look of
    
    contin�um
    
    to
    
    continu�m
    
    
    
 | 
| 724.5 | Dieresis, not umlaut | MINAR::BISHOP |  | Fri Sep 29 1989 22:45 | 10 | 
|  |     Umlaut is used to front a back vowel (o to �, u to �), or
    to back a front vowel (i to �).  German and Turkish use
    umlaut (to chose only two examples).
    
    Dieresis is used to cause two vowels in sequence to be
    pronounces as two syllables, rather than as a diphthong
    (e.g. na�ve).  English and French (among others) use
    dieresis.
    
        			-John Bishop
 | 
| 724.6 |  | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Mon Oct 02 1989 16:34 | 8 | 
|  |     picky, picky .....
    
    I was just referring to the mark, not the process, and therefore
    feel that I could call the mark fred if that described it.  So for
    those circumstances, of just describing the mark, umlaut or dieresis
    (or should that be di�resis ?) should be just fine.
    
    Stuart
 | 
| 724.7 | lituum | FDCV06::BEAIRSTO |  | Wed Oct 04 1989 19:19 | 3 | 
|  |     ...from the last page of 'The Atlantic' a few months back. I don't have
    the magazine or an unabridged dictionary handy now, but as I recall it
    was a magic wand. 
 | 
| 724.8 | FWIW | CALS::GELINEAU |  | Mon Oct 18 1993 09:16 | 13 | 
|  |  
 FWIW,
	As a physics major I pronounced 'vacuum' as vac-u-um (when referring
	to space devoid of matter) but as vak-yoom (when referring to the
	machine). 
	Don't know why - maybe transference from my professors caused the
	former pronunciation.  As a child I always used the latter pronunciation.
	Rather odd (especially considering that a vac-u-um is needed
	to make a vak-yoom cleaner).
--angela
 | 
| 724.9 |  | JIT081::DIAMOND | $ SET MIDNIGHT | Mon Oct 18 1993 17:09 | 6 | 
|  |     >Rather odd (especially considering that a vac-u-um is needed
    >to make a vak-yoom cleaner).
    
    That's rather odd.  I thought that a vak-yoom cleaner was needed
    to make a vac-u-um, though a vac-u-um was needed to make a
    vac-yoom cleaner clean.
 | 
| 724.10 |  | SMURF::BINDER | Vita venit sine titulo | Tue Oct 19 1993 06:19 | 1 | 
|  |     My vac-yoom cleaner isn't dirty.  Do I need a vac-u-um anyway?
 | 
| 724.11 |  | CALS::DESELMS | Vincer�! | Tue Oct 19 1993 06:55 | 4 | 
|  |     Why would you need a vacuum cleaner if by definition a vacuum is devoid of
    dirt?
    - Jim
 | 
| 724.12 |  | SMURF::BINDER | Vita venit sine titulo | Tue Oct 19 1993 07:53 | 1 | 
|  |     Do we hafta take devoid of dis crumb?
 | 
| 724.13 |  | MU::PORTER | cool runnings | Mon Oct 25 1993 11:34 | 1 | 
|  | Nature abhors a vacuum cleaner.
 | 
| 724.14 |  | JIT081::DIAMOND | $ SET MIDNIGHT | Mon Oct 25 1993 16:10 | 4 | 
|  |     VAX sucks.
    
    (Or to be politically correct, VAX[tm] machines suck,
    as long as you associate the trademark correctly.)
 | 
| 724.15 | note nodename | VAXUUM::T_PARMENTER | The cake of liberty | Tue Oct 26 1993 05:38 | 2 | 
|  |     Others are RAGMOP, CLOSET, CLUTTR . . .
    
 |