Hold the finger onto n until the variations of n appear.
You hold alt as you type 165 which gives you Ñ. You hold alt as you type 164 which gives you ñ. Or you can hold CTRL, the key with the squiggly line on it (and if you want the squiggly line on top you have to hold shift), and the n. This also works for the accent.
That squiggly line, specifically over the N. It gives the N that "ny" sound. Instead of pronuncing SEN-OR, you pronounce it SEN-YOR.
the accent mark
What is the name Chloe in Spanish? It is Chloe with a line above the e
They're called Gras. That's what our Spanish teacher told us in highschool. Normally, it is called a "tilde". That is also the squiggly line above the Spanish letter ñ.
The extra line on the white iPhone is not a cut out, but just a clear part of the glass. There is a proximity sensor and light sensor behind that space. You just can't see it on the Black iPhone but its there.
The extra line on the white iPhone is not a cut out, but just a clear part of the glass. There is a proximity sensor and light sensor behind that space. You just can't see it on the Black iPhone but its there.
There is the accent and the tilde á the line above the a is an accent when used to add emphasis to a letter. ñ the line above the n is a tilde In certain words the line above a vowel is also called a tilde él = Him/He . The line over the E is a tilde, not an accent even though it looks exactly like an accent. The difference is a tilde does not change the pronunciation. It is used to change the meaning of the word. el=the. él= he/him.
Colon dia (the capitol o in colOn has a line above it) It's actually Día de Colón
The line above the total is called the subtotal. It is referred to as above-the-line. It does not include deductions or taxes.
the abbot is next in line above the priest
Its orriganally arabic but adopted by Spanish after 800 years of Arab rule in Spain, not sure on what it means though.