well in english, no. In spanish speaking countries yes. Spanish accents are now more popular with the english, i myslef is spanish and never once said cafe without an accent, hope this helped
There is an acute emphasis on the e.
Cafe just accent the "e."
ma cafeThe cafe's 'e' has an accent - the line going upwards to the right
cafe, accent on the last e. it is pronounced like "kaffeh"
The accent mark goes on the "e" - café.
It's an accent, not an apostrophe. It's been borrowed from French. It's called an accent aigu.
English: Ingles (but with an accent facing left on the e). French: Frances (but with an accent facing left on the e).
English is: ingles. (accent over the 'e')
The accent is normally omitted in English.
You can make various French accents on the letter e on an English keyboard: Accent aigu (é): Alt + 130 Accent grave (è): Alt + 138 Accent circonflexe (ê): Alt + 136 Accent trema (ë): Alt + 137
The accent on the 'e' in "école" is known as an acute accent. It changes the pronunciation of the 'e' to make it sound like the 'ay' in 'say' in English.
The English word "arithmetic" carries no accent mark. The equivalent Spanish word 'aritmetica' has an accent over the 'e'.