It's called a tilde.
regi(accent o)n
Usually with an accent: Sebastián.
the accent mark over the n in spanish is pronunced 'enyeh'. It is called the virgulilla. It is often said that it is a tilde but it is not. The tilde is on an e, i, o, u, and a.
Los muchachos espanoles. Then n needs the accent mark.
Necesito aprender español (there is an accent mark above the "n" in "espanol").
Me acompanaras? (tilde, ~, over the 'n'; accent over final 'a')
He in spanish is "El" but with an accent abouve the "E" if there is not accent, el means "the". Spanish in spanish is "Espanol" but with a tilda(which looks like a squigly line) avoer the "n" which makes it pronounced with a "nya" sound. e'l pronounced as L
El periodico espanol (accent over the first o / tilde over the n)
No, the word "sabe" does not have an accent mark in Spanish. The accent mark is not needed because it follows the normal rules of stress in the Spanish language. "Sabe" is the third person singular form of the verb "saber," meaning "to know."
If a grave ends in a vowel or n or s it does not carry a written accent. If a grave ends in a consonant other than n or s it carries a written accent mark. The most of the spanish words are graves.
In English it doesn't. In Spanish it has a symbol over the n, like this: España.
It's spelled "equitación" (with an accent), and means horse-riding.