| 1. | ö | ||
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the letter ‘o’ with an ümlaut(which obviously is the two dots, ¨) hovering closely over it. Used in German alongside its capital-form{Ö} as well as ä/Ä and ü/Ü. The letter ‘ö’ is k’rrectly ASCII'd\ASCIIfied into ‘oe’, and ‘Ö’ into ‘Oe’. That is to say, ‘ö’ is commonly transformed into ‘oe’ in-order to conform with the ASCII rule that all characters must be limited to the seventy-nine able to be produced using a standard American keyboard only, while still accurately representing how it is pronounced. For example, ‘möchten’{meaning ‘to would-like’) becomes ‘moechten’.
Compare with the German ASCII-uncool \ ASCII-appropiate letter characters: ä\ae, Ä\Ae, ß\ss\sz{‘'s'-set’\‘'ess'-'tset'’} |
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| 2. | Björk | ||
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1. The most creative artist of this era. One of the greatest poets and writers ever.
2. The genre which includes only one singer: (guess who!) 1. Remember the ümlaut in Björk!
2. Bob: What genre is Björk? Me: er, Björk |
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| 3. | foolio | ||
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Someone who is the competition, someone who's ass your gunna whip, someone who isn't you that you would like to place a generic term over to up your abilities Damn son, I'm gunna kick these foolio's ass all up and down this bitch
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| 4. | spurm | ||
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A hardcore punk band from South Jersey. Are you going to the SPURM show this weekend?
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