Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
The spelling is a typical example of a "metal umlaut".
An example of this is the heavy metal umlaut.
This usage is similar to a heavy metal umlaut.
The film's publicity introduced the heavy metal umlaut above a consonant.
The metal umlaut is not generally intended to affect the pronunciation of the band's name.
The name "Queensrÿche" is written with a metal umlaut over the letter 'y'.
Therefore, the foreign branding effect of the metal umlaut is dependent on the beholder's background.
The title, which he describes as sounding "like the hardest core fantasy thing out there", makes use of the metal umlaut.
They heavy metal umlaut in their band name, which is usually purely decorative, is pronounced.
"Die Ärzte", with two dots, is correct German language orthography and not related to the heavy metal umlaut.
In this context he published a screencast illustrating how Wikipedia articles evolve, using Heavy metal umlaut as an example.
The name Da Möb comes from The Mob with a joke heavy metal umlaut.
The name of the band is rendered with an umlaut over the "n" and a dotless I, as a parody of the heavy metal umlaut.
The umlaut character ö is possibly derived from the similar "heavy metal umlaut" in the name of their 1975 acquaintances Blue Öyster Cult.
The fashion for the heavy metal umlaut (use of umlauts in the names of heavy metal bands) can also be seen as a form of foreign branding.
In the mid-1980s, cartoonist Berkeley Breathed parodied the metal umlaut in the comic strip Bloom County with the fictional group Deathtöngue.
The progressive metal band Fates Warning titled their debut album Night on Bröcken (note the "Heavy metal umlaut").
The name is derived from the name of the ancient king Gilgamesh, of Babylonian and Sumerian mythos and is sometimes stylized with a metal umlaut as girugämesh.
On their 2003 album 'Geräusch', they spell their name with three dots over the a in 'ärzte', a diacritic which does not correspond to any real language construct, intended as a play on the heavy metal umlaut.
The subtitle of the first disc is a reference to Motörhead's successful live album No Sleep 'til Hammersmith and it also puns the heavy metal umlaut, for which Motörhead is a noted example.
Mägo de Oz (Spanish for Wizard of Oz, with a metal umlaut) is a Spanish folk/heavy metal band from Begoña, Madrid formed in mid-1988 by drummer Txus di Fellatio.
(As Amon Düül was not a metal band-they created a highly eclectic world of music which is nowadays sorted into the genres of progressive rock/krautrock-this "unnecessary" umlaut cannot be considered as 'metal umlaut', if one insists on the literal meaning of the latter expression.)
The name also includes a heavy metal umlaut, again hinting at the satirical when naming a band because though Moxy Früvous was known for crossing a very wide range of genres, heavy metal is not a genre most listeners of Moxy Früvous would associate with the group.