What you probably mean is that Swedish, German, Dutch and English are Indo-European Germanic languages which have much in common. This cannot be expressed in terms of blends, products or square roots from one another. What they do have is a common root, like \sqrt(indo-european) $x$ w = Swedish, \sqrt(indo-european) $x$ x = Dutch, \sqrt(indo-european) $x$ y = German, \sqrt(indo-european) $x$ z + Latin + French = English, etc. And yes, Sanskrit, Farsi, Kurdish, Urdu and Hindi are indo-European languages too, each in their own right. Robert
Op 1 feb. 2019, om 17:16 heeft Sanjoy Mahajan
het volgende geschreven: On 2019-02-01 07:58, "Mikael P. Sundqvist"
wrote: this is what I learned from the list to use. I'm sorry, but the names sound a bit Swedish, but I'm sure you can change that.
The Swedish is not a problem. Swedish, like Dutch, seems to be (English + German)/2. Or sqrt(English*German) if, like me, you prefer the geometric mean.
This way it was also easy to add different types like hints, answers and solutions and get clickable letters accordingly.
Thank you. I'll incorporate pieces into my setups. If it ends up an improvement over what's on the wiki, I'll also wikify.
-Sanjoy ___________________________________________________________________________________ If your question is of interest to others as well, please add an entry to the Wiki!
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