What’s a Diaeresis?

And how on earth do you pronounce it? Mary Norris explains.


Mary Norris began working at The New Yorker in 1978 and spent more than three decades as a copy editor, where she worked with celebrated writers Philip Roth, Pauline Kael, and George Saunders. She is the author of Between You & Me: Confessions of a Comma Queen. Among other things, her book demystifies one of the most puzzling marks a reader is likely to encounter: the diaeresis.

If you’re reading something and you encounter a diaeresis, chances are you’re reading The New Yorker.

There is one other way to keep the “cow” out of “co-workers”: where two vowels rub up against each other, a diaeresis may be used instead of a hyphen. Often mistakenly called an umlaut, a diaeresis (pronounced “die heiresses”; it’s from the Greek for “divide,” and is devilishly hard to spell) consists of two dots carefully centered over the second vowel in such words as “naïve” and “reëlection.” An umlaut is a German thing that alters the pronunciation of a vowel (Brünnhilde) and often changes the meaning of a word: schon (adv.), already; schön (adj.), beautiful. In German, if an umlaut appears in a combination of two vowels, it will go over the first vowel, and it indicates something important: a plural, say. A diaeresis always goes over the second vowel, and it means that the vowel is leading off a separate syllable.

diaeresis

A diaeresis is a mark placed over a vowel to indicate that the vowel is pronounced in a separate syllable—as in ‘naïve’ or ‘Brontë’.

Most of the English-speaking world finds the diaeresis inessential. The New Yorker may be the only publication in America that uses it regularly. It’s actually a lot of trouble, these days, to get the diaeresis to stick over the vowel. The autocorrect whisks it off, and you have to go back, highlight the letter, hold down the option key while pressing the u, and then retype the appropriate letter. The question is: Why bother? Especially since the diaeresis is the single thing that readers of the letter-writing variety complain about most.

Basically, we have three options for these kinds of words: “cooperate,” “co-operate,” and “coöperate.” Back when the magazine was just developing its style, someone decided that the first could be misread and the second was ridiculous, and so adopted the third as the most elegant solution with the broadest application. By the thirties, when Mr. Hyphen was considering these things, the diaeresis was already almost obsolete, and he was through with it. He was for letting people figure things out for themselves. The fact is that, absent the two dots, most people would not trip over the “coop” in “cooperate” or the “reel” in “reelect,” though they might pronounce the “zoo” in “zoological” (and we don’t use the diaeresis for that).

Not everyone at The New Yorker is devoted to the diaeresis. Some have wondered why it’s still hanging around. Style does change sometimes. For instance, back in the eighties, the editors decided to modernize by moving the semicolon outside of the closing quotation mark. A notice went up on the bulletin board that began, “Adjust your reflexes.”

Lu Burke used to pester the style editor, Hobie Weekes, who had been at the magazine since 1928, to get rid of the diaeresis. Like Mr. Hyphen, Lu was a modern independent-minded reader, and she didn’t need to have her vowels micromanaged. Once, in the elevator, Weekes seemed to be weakening. He told her he was on the verge of changing that style and would be sending out a memo soon. And then he died.

This was in 1978. No one has had the nerve to raise the subject since.

Excerpted from Between You & Me: Confessions of a Comma Queen by Mary Norris. Copyright © 2015 by Mary Norris. With permission of the publisher, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. All rights reserved. To see more of our favorite books on language, click here.


Source: Merriam Webster

Without Jesus the Universe Falls Apart

“We may not see Jesus with our eyes. But he is the most real thing in the universe. The Bible says that “in him all things hold together” (Col. 1:17). Subtract Jesus from the universe, and everything falls apart. He is not a bobblehead Savior, to be smiled at and merely added to an otherwise well-oiled life. He is the mighty sustainer of the universe, to whose supreme rule we will bow the knee in either this life or the next (Phil. 2:10).”

Excerpt From
Deeper
Dane C. Ortlund

U.S. Secret Service Says It Permanently Purged Many of Its January 6 Text Messages, But in a Totally Not-Shady Way

The agency, whose January 6 text messages could presumably shed a lot of light on what Trump was up to on the day of the insurrection, swears its communications were innocently lost.

Something you’ve probably heard about once or twice in your travels is that on January 6, 2021, a group of Donald Trump’s supporters attacked the U.S Capitol in an attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election, and while they were there, ran through the building chanting “Hang Mike Pence,” a threat deemed credible enough that his Secret Service detail moved the V.P. to a secure location. As we also recently learned, according to former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson, on the day of the attack, Trump was informed that some of his supporters were armed and should not be allowed onto the Ellipse for his speech—to which the then president said let ’em in anyway, “they’re not here to hurt me”—and, separately, that Trump allegedly assaulted a Secret Service agent who told him he could not go to the Capitol to take part in the insurrection.

For all of these reasons, it would be particularly helpful to learn about the real-time communications of the Secret Service agents on the scene, which could probably shed some light on (1) a possible threat of assassination on the vice president of the United States and (2) exactly what the president of the United States, who incited the violent attack, was up to when all of this was happening. Unfortunately, though, it apparently never crossed the agency’s mind to preserve said communications, which, it turns out, were permanently deleted. Yes, really!

CNN reports that the Secret Service was “only able to provide a single text exchange”—as in one, as in the number closest to zero—to the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general who had requested a month’s worth of records from 24 Secret Service members, according to a letter the agency sent to the January 6 committee. The Washington Post separately reported on Tuesday that the agency “has determined it has no new texts to provide Congress relevant to its January 6 investigation,” and that any messages that were exchanged between agents around the time of the Capitol attack were purged, according to a senior official familiar with the matter. In an interview with MSNBC, January 6 committee member Zoe Lofgren said: “This obviously, this doesn’t look good. Coincidences can happen but we really need to get to the bottom of this and get a lot more information than we have currently.” Which is politician for “This is shady as fuck.”

But wait, it gets worse! Per CNN:

In other words, the Secret Service was told on January 16, 2021, not to delete anything, and then 11 days later…started deleting everything. Because their phones were being migrated. Which seems like something that could have been temporarily paused given the circumstances. (Separately, it seems like an extremely bad policy to rely on rank-and-file employees to ensure highly sensitive communications—like ones of potential national security significance—get appropriately saved.)

At this time, you might be wondering if, in this day and age, it’s actually possible to permanently delete any electronic communication, which generally seems to live on forever in some form or another. And if you are, you’re not alone!

Speaking to the Post, Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi insisted that the agency did not, per the paper, “maliciously delete text messages,” and that this was truly a case of them being lost because of the aforementioned plan to replace staffers’ phones. All of which seemingly merits further investigation, to say the least.

Source: Vanity Fair

Overcoming Chronic Temptations

“I know all about the despair of overcoming chronic temptations.
It is not serious provided self-offended petulance, annoyance at breaking records, impatience etc doesn’t get the upper hand. No amount of falls will really undo us if we keep on picking ourselves up each time. We shall of course be very muddy and tattered children by the time we reach home. But the bathrooms are all ready, the towels put out, and the clean clothes are airing in the cupboard.
The only fatal thing is to lose one’s temper and give it up. It is when we notice the dirt that God is most present to us: it is the very sign of His presence.”

“The Collected Letters of C. S. Lewis, vol. 3, Narnia, Cambridge, and Joy,”

Reconstruction

“We tend to think we are put on this earth to make a name for ourselves. The Bible dismantles that notion and replaces it with the knowledge that we are put here to spread God’s reputation and honor. We tend to think God will accept us if we meet a minimum bar of personal goodness. The Bible dismantles that and insists that God accepts us when we lay down the attempt to offer God anything of our own and instead receive his favor based on the work of his own Son.”

Excerpt From
Deeper
Dane C. Ortlund

Let Your Soul Breathe

“You wouldn’t try to go through life holding your breath. So don’t go through life without Bible reading and praying. Let your soul breathe. Oxygenate with the Bible; and breathe out the CO2 of prayer as you speak back to God your wonder, your worry, and your waiting. He is not a force, not an ideal, not a machine. He is a person. Keep open the channel between your little life and heaven itself through the Bible and prayer.
As you do, you will grow. You won’t feel it day to day. But you’ll come to the end of your life a radiant, solid man or woman. And you will have left in your wake the aroma of heaven. You will have blessed the world. Your life will have mattered.”

Excerpt From
Deeper
Dane C. Ortlund

Real Change

“We’re talking about real change. And we’re talking about real change for real sinners. If you confess the doctrine of original sin but at the same time feel yourself to be doing pretty well as a Christian, you can put this book back on the shelf. This book is for the frustrated. The exhausted. Those on the brink. Those on the verge of giving up any real progress in their Christian growth.”

Excerpt From
Deeper
Dane C. Ortlund