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Webster 1913 Edition


N

N

(ĕn)
,
the fourteenth letter of English alphabet, is a vocal consonent, and, in allusion to its mode of formation, is called the dentinasal or linguanasal consonent. Its commoner sound is that heard in ran, done; but when immediately followed in the same word by the sound of g hard or k (as in single, sink, conquer), it usually represents the same sound as the digraph ng in sing, bring, etc. This is a simple but related sound, and is called the gutturo-nasal consonent. See
Guide to Pronunciation
, §§ 243-246.
The letter N came into English through the Latin and Greek from the Phoenician, which probably derived it from the Egyptian as the ultimate origin. It is etymologically most closely related to M. See
M
.

N

,
Noun.
(Print.)
A measure of space equal to half an M (or em); an en.

Webster 1828 Edition


N

N

is the fourteenth letter of the English Alphabet, and an articulation formed by placing the end of the tongue against the root of the upper teeth. It is an imperfect mute or semi-vowel, and a nasal letter; the articulation being accompanied with a sound through the nose. It has one sound only, and after m is silent or nearly so, as in hymn and condemn. N, among the ancients, was a numeral letter signifying 900, and with a stroke over it, 9000. Among the lawyers, N. L. stood for non liquet, the case is not clear. In commerce, No. Is an abbreviation of the French nombre, and stands for number. N.S. stands for New Style.

Definition 2024


Ń

Ń

Ń U+0143, Ń
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER N WITH ACUTE
Composition: N [U+004E] + ́ [U+0301]
ł
[U+0142]
Latin Extended-A ń
[U+0144]

Navajo

Letter

Ń (lowercase ń)

  1. The letter N with a tone mark. It is exactly equivalent to the high-tone syllable [NÍ], and may be pronounced either as a high-tone syllabic [n] or as [ní]; it may be written either as [Ń] or as [NÍ]. It is probably more common to see the spelling with [ní] because it is easier to enter, but more often than not the pronunciation will be the high-tone syllabic [n]. It is a separate morpheme in Navajo but it does not have a separate place in the Navajo alphabet. Syllabic ń may appear before these consonants: d, j, ʼd, ʼdz, ʼj, l, t, tʼ, tł, tłʼ, ts, tsx.

See also

  • Navajo alphabet

ń

ń

ń U+0144, ń
LATIN SMALL LETTER N WITH ACUTE
Composition: n [U+006E] + ́ [U+0301]
Ń
[U+0143]
Latin Extended-A Ņ
[U+0145]
See also: Appendix:Variations of "n"

Mandarin

Romanization

ń (Zhuyin ㄋˊ)

  1. Pinyin transcription of
  2. Pinyin transcription of
  3. Pinyin transcription of

Navajo

Letter

ń (uppercase Ń)

  1. The letter n with a tone mark. It is exactly equivalent to the high-tone syllable [ní], and may be pronounced either as a high-tone syllabic [n] or as [ní]; it may be written either as [ń] or as [ní]. It is probably more common to see the spelling with [ní] because it is easier to enter, but more often than not the pronunciation will be the high-tone syllabic [n]. It is a separate morpheme in Navajo but it does not have a separate place in the Navajo alphabet. Syllabic ń may appear before these consonants: d, j, ʼd, ʼdz, ʼj, l, t, tʼ, tł, tłʼ, ts, tsx.

See also

  • Navajo alphabet