Talk:Nôm: Difference between revisions
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imported>Peter Kauffner (Why Nôm?) |
imported>Peter Kauffner |
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This a note just in case anyone wonders why I selected the title "Nôm", as oppose to "chữ Nôm", "chu Nom", "nom" etc, all of which are certainly common usage as well. This version of the name follows the usage of the [http://nomfoundation.org/ Vietnamese Nôm Preservation Foundation]. "Chu" mean "letters" or "script." Such descriptors as treated as part of the name in Asian languages, but dropping them off is considered good translation practice. [[User:Peter Kauffner|Peter Kauffner]] 03:17, 11 November 2013 (UTC) | This a note just in case anyone wonders why I selected the title "Nôm", as oppose to "chữ Nôm", "chu Nom", "nom" etc, all of which are certainly common usage as well. This version of the name follows the usage of the [http://nomfoundation.org/ Vietnamese Nôm Preservation Foundation]. "Chu" mean "letters" or "script." Such descriptors as treated as part of the name in Asian languages, but dropping them off is considered good translation practice. In general, diacritics should be dropped off of Vietnamese words when they appear in English. But after "nom nom" became a buzzword, I thought this one looked better with a diacritic. [[User:Peter Kauffner|Peter Kauffner]] 03:17, 11 November 2013 (UTC) |
Revision as of 21:29, 10 November 2013
Title of article
This a note just in case anyone wonders why I selected the title "Nôm", as oppose to "chữ Nôm", "chu Nom", "nom" etc, all of which are certainly common usage as well. This version of the name follows the usage of the Vietnamese Nôm Preservation Foundation. "Chu" mean "letters" or "script." Such descriptors as treated as part of the name in Asian languages, but dropping them off is considered good translation practice. In general, diacritics should be dropped off of Vietnamese words when they appear in English. But after "nom nom" became a buzzword, I thought this one looked better with a diacritic. Peter Kauffner 03:17, 11 November 2013 (UTC)