ñ is a different letter than n. ñ make the sound ny so its said senyor instead of senor
The squiggly mark over the n in spanish is called a tilde.
Two parallel lines which are "wiggly", mean roughly equal to.
The squiggly thing on the n means to make a 'nyay' sound, and the mark on vowels means to accent the letter.
you have little worms in your eyes every one dose they cleen them so they do u good :D
ñ is a different letter than n. ñ make the sound ny so its said senyor instead of senor
The squiggly mark over the n in spanish is called a tilde.
The "squiggly line" over the n in "señor" (~) is called a tilde, a type of diacritical mark. In Spanish, the ñ is a separate letter of the Spanish alphabet, with a different pronunciation from a regular n. The Spanish ñ has a "ny" sound, while the Spanish regular n is pronounced much the same as in English.
That squiggly line, specifically over the N. It gives the N that "ny" sound. Instead of pronuncing SEN-OR, you pronounce it SEN-YOR.
nono which translates as soppy in English. (the 2 N's have the squiggly upside down s on top I couldn't put the squiggly bit because i have an English keyboard))
It looks exactly the same, however there is sometimes a squiggly mark at the top.
Two parallel lines which are "wiggly", mean roughly equal to.
Low tire pressureLow tire pressure
The squiggly thing on the n means to make a 'nyay' sound, and the mark on vowels means to accent the letter.
It means to teach, and there's a tilde (squiggly line diacritical mark) over the n.
The Lord = El Senor Our Lord = Nuestro senor lord as a title is just senor or sometimes lord
Draw a squiggly line under the 0.