AllThingsGerman.net  
   
 
About me
 
Placement
Flats
Moving
Recipes
Books
News
Music
Comedy
 
Podcasts
Store
Forum
Newsletter
Contact
Imprint
 
 
 
 
ImmobilienScout24 - Immobilie suchen, Wohnung, Haus, Grundstück mieten


Großes ß

It’s not often that I can say this, but I used a new letter of the alphabet for the first time this weekend.

Now it’s quite possible, that you are not even aware that the German alphabet has a new letter.  It is, in fact the Eszett (ß), which now has a capital equivalent.

Until now, the letter ß – which replaces ss or sz in a word  – has strictly speaking only be a lower case letter.  If you wrote a work in capital letters, you were expected to write it out in full.  eg. muß became MUSS.

Apparently there was a capital ß in East Germany for a time and it was even used on the cover of the East-German Duden dictionary for a number of years, but only in April of this year did it become formally recognised for the whole of Germany.  (For techies out there: it is part of ISO/IEC 10646, unicode U+1E9E)

So when I was writing my Christmas cards this weekend, I addressed them to “GROßBRITANNIEN” – hence writing my first capital ß.

Bookmark and Share

Tags: ,

Some other posts that our readers enjoy:

  • http://www.allthingsgerman.net/blog/index.php/music/naming-musical-notes/ Naming musical notes | Music | AllThingsGerman.net

    [...] not only has a few extra letters of the alphabet (ä, ö, ü, Ä, Ö, Ü and ß), it also has different names for musical notes as [...]

blog comments powered by Disqus