Digram in a sentence as a noun

I would guess that the letter frequency, digram and trigram frequencies etc are quite skewed compared to random.

Interesting but I'm not sure if it's any better than digram or trigram frequency.

Nice idea, however it would be lot easier and faster for my to draw the digram than it would take to write the code in strange language.

In the English example, "u" is being used as a non-traditional phonetic digram /ju/. Your example from the Rosetta Stone was a phonetic use of the symbol.

Something I didn't mention in the video is that I had to tweak the positioning of certain letters due to common digrams in English.

Adding a digram or trigram model would be interesting, as having one of these could greatly reduce the crack time of an English sentence as compared to random English words.

For example : The descriptions of the lock and dams that keep the Mississippi being taken over by the Atchafalaya in text were good, but I found that a digram can be very illustrative.

"No matter what you say about text being the only way to transmit knowledge, there are plenty of occasions where a simple digram transmits much more meaning to me than reams of text, I am visual thinker and learner."Fine.

The word supplemental means "in addition to", the paper should still happen!A last, slightly tangential thing: No matter what you say about text being the only way to transmit knowledge, there are plenty of occasions where a simple digram transmits much more meaning to me than reams of text, I am visual thinker and learner.

Digram definitions

noun

two successive letters (especially two letters used to represent a single sound: `sh' in `shoe')

See also: digraph