It is called a tilde. It is one of many marks that can be placed above, below, within or between letters of various alphabets, including the marks that are called accents. They all fall under the category of diacritical marks, or diacritics.
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.
They're called Gras. That's what our Spanish teacher told us in highschool. Normally, it is called a "tilde". That is also the squiggly line above the Spanish letter ñ.
"H" (hache) is the Spanish letter that is silent.
In Spanish, Kirby is pronounced as "Ker-bee." The letter "i" in Spanish is pronounced as "ee," and the letter "y" is pronounced as "ee" as well. Therefore, the pronunciation of Kirby in Spanish follows these phonetic rules.
There are no Spanish words that begin with the letter W. There may be some words borrowed from foreign languages that do, but if so they are few. Many do not consider W to be a letter in the Spanish alphabet.
The squiggly symbol placed over the letter "s" in "José" is called an acute accent. It indicates that the letter "e" is pronounced with emphasis in Spanish.
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.
They're called Gras. That's what our Spanish teacher told us in highschool. Normally, it is called a "tilde". That is also the squiggly line above the Spanish letter ñ.
The 2 squiggly lines (~) is called a tilde. It can mean "approximately" or "similar to" in text, as well as indicate a range of values. It is also used in some languages as a diacritic mark to change the pronunciation of a letter.
ñ is a different letter than n. ñ make the sound ny so its said senyor instead of senor
Open
The squiggly line is actually under the c, and it is an accent called a cedilla. It indicates that the c has a soft sound rather than a hard sound (like an s instead of a k)
A comma. ' Dear Sir, ' or ' Dear Madam, ' or ' Messrs., ' (A fullsto/period, and a comma, because this is a shortened word for 'Messieurs' . It is pronounced as 'messers'. It is used when the written communication is for several gentlemen to read. NOT 'Dear Messrs'. Shortened words in the English language are followed by a fullstop/period, e.g. Mr. , then the comma as in other salutations. You can drop the 'Dear' and just write 'Sir, or 'Madam,' etc., but it is seen as very formal. If you write the King Charles(III) it is not 'Dear King (Charles),' , but ' Your Majesty, ' Neither 'dears' nor 'names' .
I'm not completely sure but I believe it's called a "tilde"
A colon is placed after "Dear" in a business letter, not after "The."
put in right punctuation or go to brainpop.com
None, open punctuation means there is no punctuation after the salutation or the complimentary close.