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.
It means to teach, and there's a tilde (squiggly line diacritical mark) over the n.
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.
Mr. Kiss my lips
the Spanish word for crankshaft is 'cigunal' and the u has 2 dots over it and the n has a squiggly line on top
What is the gentleman's name/What is the gentleman called
That squiggly line, specifically over the N. It gives the N that "ny" sound. Instead of pronuncing SEN-OR, you pronounce it SEN-YOR.
this is and ampersand......&
It means congruent. It is NOT 'approximately equal', which would be an equal sigh where BOTH lines are squiggly.
Draw a squiggly line under the 0.
The squiggly mark in Spanish is called a tilde. It is used to indicate sound changes or to differentiate between similar words.
No.
It is a line that twists and turns, not astraight line.
/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ is the line
If you mean the n with a squiggly line on top, it's pronounced en-yay.
I drew a squiggly line.
The word is mispelledA RED squiggly line means the word is misspelled. A GREEN squiggly line means that there is one or more extra space or tab characters that aren't grammatically needed.
It is in fact not a squiggly line.. But a small outline of the state. This is done to combat counterfeitting and also as a tracking method.