I would buy some transparent greek stick on letters for the keyboard and just switch the layout.
Something like this:
http://www.latkey.com/keyboard_stickers.asp?SubCat=9
Hello
I study G(r)eek words for school, but I'm a little tired of the flashcard thing. I already study English/French/Latin('Roman'/German words using KVocTrain, but I don't know how to get spiritusses on my greek letters.
Look:
εις - means one
εις - means in(to), to
You would say they are the same, but you pronounce them differently, so they aren't. To make this clear people use ,'s and `'s on their letters. How do I do this in KDE/GNOME (I prefer KDE, but GNOME is fine).
Help is appreciated
Aljosha
I would buy some transparent greek stick on letters for the keyboard and just switch the layout.
Something like this:
http://www.latkey.com/keyboard_stickers.asp?SubCat=9
link.
I did this to get spanish characters:
ñ¿Ñ etc.
[quote author=trickster link=board=1;threadid=10799;start=0#msg96885 date=1131811064]
link.
I did this to get spanish characters:
ñ¿Ñ etc.
[/quote]
Awesome. Thanks Trickster. I am learning spanish at school and I used some other methods to copy some of the spanish characters, etc. This will help! karma++.
Let me know if you want me to post my .xmodmaprc file
I would imagine that it depends on the language. I have a suspicion that a few may be easier to buy a native keyboard and just change the keyboard type for X.
Are you studying ancient (classical) Greek or modern? Modern is well supported but I'm not so certain about classical. I might have to look into that. I want to study classical Greek and Hebrew and would much rather type natively. I think I'm going to have to look into it.
Cheers
I study ancient Greek.
Modern Greek doesn't have Spiritusses
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