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Hi :)
You might find more people that are familiar with this on the international translators list
L10n@Global.LibreOffice.Org
or on the Greek mailing list.  My guess is that when you first type in the letter it appears as it 
would be in the middle of a word but then if you press space afterwards it changes to the way it 
should be at the end of a word.  On the other hand maybe there are 2 keys for it?  

The iTrans thing sounds a lot like the standard way of typing in Japanese because it's extremely 
difficult to get a keyboard that shows Japanese characters even in Japan.  Personally i think it 
sounds like a nightmare but plenty of people seem to have become familiar with typing like that.  
Regards from 
Tom :)  



________________________________
From: John Jason Jordan <johnxj@comcast.net>
To: users@global.libreoffice.org 
Sent: Wednesday, 2 October 2013, 6:35
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Typing in Greek


On Tue, 01 Oct 2013 21:44:51 -0700
Joel Madero <jmadero.dev@gmail.com> dijo:

At first I was perplexed because some of the keys seemed to give me
the Greek glyphs that sound similar to the English letters, e.g., t
gives me a tau, but the s only gave me upper- and regular lowercase
sigma, not the word-ending sigma. Later I found an image of a real
Greek keyboard and discovered that the word-ending sigma is the w
key. I need to print myself a picture of a real Greek keyboard and
post it above my monitor for reference until I get the hang of touch
typing in Greek.

if there is an itrans version then you just type like English and it 
translates it to the equivalent sound in Greek. I use this for Telugu 
and it's pretty amazing.

I don't know if there is an itrans version or not, but I can't imagine
that it would work anyway. The Greek letter sigma is more or less
equivalent to English s, but there are two lowercase glyphs, one used
in the middle of the word and the other only at the end of a word. How
would a keyboard based on sound know whether I was at the end of the
word or not?

Then there are the aspirated consonants phi, theta and chi. There are
no equivalent letters for those sounds in English.

But for the most part the keyboard is similar to the English as far as
sound is concerned. It won't be that bad learning how to type Greek on
a US English keyboard.

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