Why is an apostrophe or single quote, and possibly some other similar
symbols, often read as A-Circumflex?

This made comprehension of the article on iTunes included in the last
digest very difficult.  Because the A-Circumflex broke up the word, we
were treated to a string of "you ree able to find the things that you lee
like once more in iTunes."

I'm paraphrasing, but you get the point.  This seems to be a universal
enough problem that a fix is worthwhile.  Why does it happen, even with
the writer's best intentions in many cases, and can it be corrected?

Hope someone has an idea or two on this one.
-- 
"Americans must know the basic architecture of programs designed to
protect them."(Senator Franken.) Regards, Max.


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