N (letter): Difference between revisions
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'''N''' is a letter of the [[Latin alphabet]]. It is the fourteenth letter of most variants of the Latin alphabet, being placed after [[M (letter)|M]] and before [[O (letter)|O]]: for instance it is the case in the [[English alphabet]]. Its English name is pronounced [ˈen], that is ''en'', as in ''en dash''. | '''N, n''' is a letter of the [[Latin alphabet]]. It is the fourteenth letter of most variants of the Latin alphabet, being placed after [[M (letter)|M]] and before [[O (letter)|O]]: for instance it is the case in the [[English alphabet]]. Its English name is pronounced [ˈen], that is ''en'', as in ''en dash''. | ||
==Use in English== | ==Use in English== | ||
'''n''' is pronounced in the position of '''t''' (as in '''tén''') and '''d''' (as in '''dòes'''), tongue behind upper teeth, hummed. Examples (the accents show stress and pronunciation: see [[English phonemes]]): '''nòne, noôn, nåughty, nîce, nô, nót, Nétherlands, níl, nought, nòthing, any''' (pronounced *énny), '''sâne, pâne''' ''window'' = '''pâin''' ''hurt, nāsty''. | '''n''' is pronounced in the position of '''t''' (as in '''tén''') and '''d''' (as in '''dòes'''), tongue behind upper teeth, hummed. Examples (the accents show stress and pronunciation: see [[English phonemes]]): '''nòne, noôn, nåughty, nîce, nô, nót, Nétherlands, níl, nought, nòthing, any''' (pronounced *énny), '''sâne, pâne''' ''window'' = '''pâin''' ''hurt, nāsty''. |
Revision as of 18:31, 23 December 2008
N, n is a letter of the Latin alphabet. It is the fourteenth letter of most variants of the Latin alphabet, being placed after M and before O: for instance it is the case in the English alphabet. Its English name is pronounced [ˈen], that is en, as in en dash.
Use in English
n is pronounced in the position of t (as in tén) and d (as in dòes), tongue behind upper teeth, hummed. Examples (the accents show stress and pronunciation: see English phonemes): nòne, noôn, nåughty, nîce, nô, nót, Nétherlands, níl, nought, nòthing, any (pronounced *énny), sâne, pâne window = pâin hurt, nāsty.
It may be preceded by a silent k at the beginning of a word: knôw, knót, knéll, knóll, knîfe, knêad dough (= nêed require) or, initially or towards the end, by a silent g: gnát, gnôme, gnû, rèign, sîgn, desîgn, colôgne, dèign.
It is doubled in the middle of words to keep the preceding vowel short: fúnny (from fún) ínner, wínning, dínner, Ánnie, Kénnedy, mánned, bánned. Where an n follows the prefix un-, both n’s must be pronounced, that is to say, the sound is lengthened: unnátural, unnécessary, unnêeded; and with a silent k in unknôwn.
n begins consonant clusters: áncestor (-ns-), cóncrête (-ngk-), lúnch, ánchor (-nk-), úncle, énd, hándle, Ándrew, infŏrm, ínflâte, ínfra-réd, éngine, engâge, inhérent, thínk, ánkle, insîde, mónster, ínstrúct, bént, mántle, éntry, énvelope, jínx (-ks), ánxious (-nksh), anxîety (-ngz-), énzyme.
Silent n comes after m at the end of åutumn, hýmn, cólumn, dámn, condémn, sólemn.
ng has its own sound, a hum in the back of the throat: síng, wíng, sínging, sóng, ríng, wróng, díng-dóng, báng.
In this final position, the g is never pronounced separately (apart from in some English regional pronunciations) and this is true before a vowel in the middle of some words: sínger, wínger, wrónged, bánging, and in dínghy boat (díng- + silent h, + -ŷ, with or without hard g) it is followed by an h to distinguish it from díngy dirty, which has the j sound *dínjy, as does dúngeon, *dúnjən. But the g is pronounced (not as a j) separately in the middle of other words: fínger (*fíng-gə(r)), English (*Íng-glish), ánger (*áng-gə(r)), ángry (*áng-gry).
This ng sound is also heard where n is followed by c, k, or x: úncle, ánkle, ánchor (*ángkə(r), cf. ánchovy, nch as -ntch-), ánxious, sínk, thínk, tánk, wínkle, ínkling, tínkle, ráncour.