The N is called a "tilde N" and is a separate letter and sound (enye, NY as vowel Y, consonant N) in Spanish. It is seen in jalapeño (hah-lah-PAYN-yoh) and other words such as año, niño, and piñata.
ummm there is ll n with ~ over it ch and uhhh i forget the other one *** Ňň, Ll ll, Ch ch [technecally they arent letters but they are part of the alphabet] And the rolling R verbally expressed as erre, and written in teaching the Spanish language as just rr , but is spoken after the regular R separately in speaking the alphabet for learners.
n
a diacritical squiggle is a mark that you may see on top of some letters to show emphasis on that letter or syllable. They are often used in spanish, especially on the letter n, which with a ~ on top is pronounced enye.
In Spanish, it is spelled "carin~o" (where the N is designated with the symbol on top of the N, to distinguish and identify it as a "Spanish 'N' " and is pronounced "enye". Therefore, in Spanish "carin~o" is pronounced - "carin-yo". "Carinho" is the Portuguese spelling. In both languages, the word is a "term of endearment" - carin~o or carinho means "loved on" (like the other more popular term "amor" (simply, "love")
There are many "Spanglish" words. One is jeans. I have also had several conversations with Spaniards who call each other pretty boy as an insult. There are also a lot of misappropriated words in Spanish from English in modern Spanish slang. A good example is "crack". If a Spanish person says "Has hecho un crack" it does not mean that you have broken something, but that you have discovered a clever solution to a problem. Spanish also absorbs words from the places that they conquered or had frequent dealings with. Words like "aguacate" (avocado) and "chocolate" come from the Nahuatl (Aztec) words "aguacatl" and "xocolatl". Words like "algodón" (cotton) and "aceite" (olive oil) come from the Arabic words "al-qoton" (القطن) and "az-zeitun" (الزيتون ).
Ama_norms and values ayizinto ezibalulekile ngoba enye iyancoma enye iyagxeka. NORMS angiwazi kanti VALUES ikuthanda into noma ukungayifuni
Enye hwe (eh-nye shre)
In Igbo language, you can say "I na-enye m aka" to mean "you have my heart".
Just click insert then locate symbols ( upper right side ) and that's it! lfcric@gmail.com
press and hold Ctrl+shift+~ (~ is beside no. 1) then press n.
The trickiest part is the enye. 'Ñ'. or 'enye', such as in 'pestaña' is pronounced as an 'N' next to a 'Y'. Try saying "nyah". That's the end of the word. Before that, you have 'peh-stah'. Sort of like pesto, only with an 'ah' on the end, instead of an 'oh'. Now put it together: 'peh-stah-nyah'. Excellent.