[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: es means ees???
From: |
Graham Percival |
Subject: |
Re: es means ees??? |
Date: |
Tue, 7 Oct 2014 11:04:39 +0900 |
User-agent: |
Mutt/1.5.21 (2010-09-15) |
On Mon, Oct 06, 2014 at 01:41:30PM +0200, David Kastrup wrote:
> Richard Shann <address@hidden> writes:
>
> > Here, instead of ees, is written es.
>
> I read
>
> In Dutch, aes is contracted to as, but both forms are accepted in
> LilyPond. Similarly, both es and ees are accepted. This also applies
> to aeses / ases and eeses / eses. Sometimes only these contracted
> names are defined in the corresponding language files.
Yes. In case anybody was wondering, I deliberately moved the "as"
and "es" contractions from the tutorial into the NR ages ago. For
people unfamiliar with that notation, it's easier to remember
"letter name plus -es or -is" rather than introducing all the
contractions.
Cheers,
- Graham
- es means ees???, Richard Shann, 2014/10/06
- Re: es means ees???, David Kastrup, 2014/10/06
- Re: es means ees???, Richard Shann, 2014/10/06
- Re: es means ees???,
Graham Percival <=
- Re: es means ees???, Richard Shann, 2014/10/07
- Re: es means ees???, David Kastrup, 2014/10/07
- Re: es means ees???, Richard Shann, 2014/10/07
- Re: es means ees???, David Kastrup, 2014/10/07
- Re: es means ees???, Richard Shann, 2014/10/07
- Re: es means ees???, David Kastrup, 2014/10/07
- Re: es means ees???, Richard Shann, 2014/10/07
- Re: es means ees???, David Kastrup, 2014/10/07
- Re: es means ees???, Hans Aberg, 2014/10/07
Re: es means ees???, address@hidden, 2014/10/06