Ň

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Latin small and capital letter n with caron, and small capitals ‘vášeň’
Latin small and capital letter n with caron, and the word "vášeň" (passion)
N with caron in Doulos SIL

The grapheme Ň (minuscule: ň) is a letter in the Czech, Slovak and Turkmen alphabets. It is formed from Latin N with the addition of a caron (háček in Czech and mäkčeň in Slovak) and follows plain N in the alphabet. Ň and ň are at Unicode codepoints U+0147 and U+0148, respectively.[1][2]

/ɲ/[edit]

In Czech and Slovak, ň represents /ɲ/, the palatal nasal, similar to the sound in English canyon. Thus, it has the same function as Albanian and Serbo-Croatian nj / њ, French and Italian gn, Catalan and Hungarian ny, Polish ń, Occitan and Portuguese nh, Galician and Spanish ñ and Belarusian, Russian and Ukrainian нь.

In the 19th century, it was used in Croatian for the same sound.

In Slovak, ne is pronounced ňe. In Czech, this syllable is written . In Czech and Slovak, ni is pronounced ňi. In Russian, Ukrainian and similar languages, soft vowels (е, и, ё, ю, я) also change previous н to нь in pronunciation.

/ŋ/[edit]

In Turkmen, ň represents the sound /ŋ/, the velar nasal, as in English thing. In Turkmen's Cyrillic script, this corresponds to the letter Ң ң (En with descender). In Janalif, it corresponds to the letter Ꞑ ꞑ (N with descender). In other Turkic languages with the velar nasal, it corresponds to the letter Ñ ñ (N with tilde).

It is also used in Southern Kurdish to represent the same sound.

Computing codes[edit]

Character information
Preview Ň ň
Unicode name LATIN CAPITAL LETTER N WITH CARON LATIN SMALL LETTER N WITH CARON
Encodings decimal hex dec hex
Unicode 327 U+0147 328 U+0148
UTF-8 197 135 C5 87 197 136 C5 88
Numeric character reference Ň Ň ň ň
Named character reference Ň ň
ISO 8859-2 147 93 148 94

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Unicode Character 'LATIN CAPITAL LETTER N WITH CARON' (U+0147)". FileFormat.Info. Retrieved 27 July 2010.
  2. ^ "Unicode Character 'LATIN SMALL LETTER N WITH CARON' (U+0148)". FileFormat.Info. Retrieved 27 July 2010.

See also[edit]