Yes, the Greek letter "ni" (Ν,ν) is the equivalant of "n".
In English 'M' - In Greek 'N' (nu)
The greek letter "N,ν" is the corresponding "N,n" of the latin alphabet and it is used exactly as this one. It is pronounced "n".
The Greek alphabet was based on the Phoenician alphabet.
The Phoenician alphabet was the inspiration for the Greek alphabet.
The 14th letter of the modern Greek alphabet is xi. It is written uppercase Ξ, lowercase ξ , and the Greek name for the letter is ξι.
The Cyrillic alphabet is derived from the Greek alphabet, with the addition of several characters from the Hebrew alphabet.
The Greek alphabet, an evolution of the Phoenician. An evolution of the Greek alphabet was the Latin.
In the Greek alphabet, "Diane" can be spelled as "Διάνη." The Greek letter "Δ" represents the "D" sound, "ι" corresponds to the "i," "ά" represents the "a," "ν" is for the "n," and "η" gives the "e" sound at the end.
The thirteenth letter of the Greek alphabet is Nu (Ν in uppercase, ν in lowercase). It corresponds to the letter "N" in the English alphabet. Nu is often used in various fields, including mathematics and science, to represent variables or constants.
The Phoenician's most important gift was the Phoenician alphabet. Also known as the Greek alphabet
Americans use the Latin Alphabet, which was directly influenced and based on the Greek Alphabet.
You don't. The Greek alphabet is quite different from the Latin alphabet (which is used for English).