Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
To get accented vowels on a Mac, hold down the Option/Alt key (⌥), and press the e key. Then, release both keys and type the letter that you want to accent. For the ñ, hold down the Option/Alt key while you press the n key, then press n again. To type an umlaut over the u, hold down the Option/Alt key while pressing the u key, then press u ...
Go to your Control Panel Click on "Date, Time, Language, and Regional Options" Click on "Regional and Language Options" Select the "Languages" tab at the top Click on "Details" near the bottom Click "Add" and choose "Spanish-Traditional Sort" Go back to the "Languages" tab and choose the option to "switch languages" by pressing "left alt-shift ...
Take some time to memorize the following character codes. It’ll save you time in the future! To type a character code into your computer, hold down the ALT button and use your number pad to type the four-digit number after ALT. For example, type ALT 0241 to get the ñ.
Translate Alt codes. See Spanish-English translations with audio pronunciations, examples, and word-by-word explanations.
Translate Alt codes spanish. See Spanish-English translations with audio pronunciations, examples, and word-by-word explanations.
Translate Alt codes for tick. See Spanish-English translations with audio pronunciations, examples, and word-by-word explanations.
4 Answer s. Hi Janice, You can get these «» by using the following key combinations: alt + 0171 = «. alt + 0187 = ». However, you must type the numbers using the number keys on the left of your keyboard (the number pad). What has always annoyed me is that you can't use the long dash with this editor (at least, not easily)
There are multiple keys that must be pressed on the keyboard to make these symbols. For the upside down question mark type: Alt + 168. For the upside down exclamation point type: Alt + 173. You can learn how to make other Spanish accent marks here: Upside Down Exclamation Point. updated Jan 30, 2017.
Explanation. Quick Answer. The letter g in Spanish has three different pronunciations depending on the vowels it is combined with and the speaker’s place of origin. It can be pronounced: like the g in the English word girl, as in gato (cat), goma (rubber), gusano (worm), bilingüe (bilingual), and zigzag (zigzag)—but not before e or i.
I did have to ask for help on the vowels - it turns out that to get the accents, once you have a Spanish keyboard, you hit the " [" key just before the letter you want to accent (so that " [e" will give you é). The ñ is hiding in the ; key as its own letter. ¡Buena suerte! updated Aug 4, 2010. edited by kahlan.