Also, by your coöperative pronunciation example, people would be mispronouncing reëlect.
I’m not sure what you mean.
It’s pronounced co-operative and re-elect. Coöp needs it to not sound like “coop” as in chicken coop. Reëlect needs it to not sound like “reel” as in fishing reel.
Diaereses don’t indicate stress. They indicate separately pronounced vowels.
When you say OP, who are you talking about? The author of the post was talking about hyphens, and nothing about stresssed syllables, and I’m the one who brought up diaereses, and I wasn’t referring to stressed syllables, either.
Would the dieresis be placed on top of the s in lineöfsight? Or would it be for vowels only?
Also, by your coöperative pronunciation example, people would be mispronouncing reëlect.
It’s vowels only, and that’s funny. I hadn’t thought about it for my hypothetical “lineofsite” word.
I’m not sure what you mean.
It’s pronounced co-operative and re-elect. Coöp needs it to not sound like “coop” as in chicken coop. Reëlect needs it to not sound like “reel” as in fishing reel.
You are right in that specific case, but I was thinking of another case of pronunciation: where to put the stress.
Co-operative —> co ó perative Re-elect ----> re e léct.
But maybe OP wasn’t referring to that.
Diaereses don’t indicate stress. They indicate separately pronounced vowels.
When you say OP, who are you talking about? The author of the post was talking about hyphens, and nothing about stresssed syllables, and I’m the one who brought up diaereses, and I wasn’t referring to stressed syllables, either.