D

<p>Have the num lock key on</p>

<p>Use LEFT alt key and type in the number from the NUMERIC Key Pad</p>

<p>128 </p>

<p>Sweet I’ve always wanted to make ü! Thanks.</p>

<p>Thaks, Simba!! :)</p>

<p>Simba, thanks for that, you post the best stuff…</p>

<p>Thanks for the complement. Did you try ¿¿¿¿</p>

<p>Nifty. Thank ú.</p>

<p>Hmm. Doesn’t have the double ‘’ sign used on Hungarian vowels.</p>

<p>And not as easy as a Mac, but the Mac doesn’t have the Hungarian ‘’ either.</p>

<p>Thank you!! I’ve been trying to figure out how to do this on my laptop for ages! :)</p>

<p>That’s pretty hip. I’ve forwarded the info to my kid.</p>

<p>Can you do it on a lap top? My son’s girlfriend tried but couldn’t. Or maybe she doesn’t have a number pad on her laptop.</p>

<p>If you read the link there is a way to do it without remembering these codes (both for Mac and PC). There is a table with permissible or ‘allowed’ accents for certain letters. If I remember it, it is:</p>

<ol>
<li>press ctrl + the accent simultaneously. If the accent requires shift key (for ~ and ^) you have to press shift key as well.</li>
<li>Release those keys and type the letter.</li>
</ol>

<p>I think it works only in the word document. Only the codes seem to work in browser. you can do them in word and paste in browser e.g. </p>

<p>Thank you so much. I need this kind of thing all the time for foreign language music texts. Lorelei</p>

<p>Quite fun! Thanks so much, will be great for the linguists in the family, if they don’t know already. But there must be an advanced list somewhere. Hirigana and katakana? Russian?</p>