Ň
Appearance


The
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/
In Czech and Slovak, ň represents /ɲ/, the
gn, Catalan and Hungarian ny, Polish ń, Occitan and Portuguese nh, Galician and Spanish ñ, Latvian and Livonian ņ
and Belarusian, Russian, Rusyn 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 ně. 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/
In
N with tilde
).
It is also used in
Sorani and Southern Kurdish
to represent the same sound.
Computing codes
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 | ||
2 |
147 | 93 | 148 | 94 |
References
- ^ "Unicode Character 'LATIN CAPITAL LETTER N WITH CARON' (U+0147)". FileFormat.Info. Retrieved 27 July 2010.
- ^ "Unicode Character 'LATIN SMALL LETTER N WITH CARON' (U+0148)". FileFormat.Info. Retrieved 27 July 2010.