You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
I assume you’re writing in American English, but you might still encounter ◊em{accented characters} in foreign words. Foreign words arise in two situations:
◊numbered-list{
In proper names, like people and places (◊em{Albrecht Dürer, François Truffaut, Plácido Domingo}). In names, accented characters must always appear accurately. Otherwise, the name is misspelled.
In loanwords used in American English. Some of these words have become citizens and should be spelled without accents ◊em{(naive} for ◊em{naïve}, ◊em{melee} for ◊em{mêlée}, ◊em{coupe} for ◊em{coupé)}. Others have not and should not (◊em{cause célèbre}, ◊em{piña colada}, ◊em{Götterdämmerung}). Check a dictionary or usage guide.