Use the alt code: ALT+0241Copy the letter into your document: ñHope this helps!
no, letter N has no line symmetry.
44 : N you can also put it like this 44/n and u put n and 44 together but have a line go over 44 and between n and 44
The slope (rise over run) of one line will be a number (n) or (-n) and the perpendicular line's slope will be the exact opposite. So, for instance, if one line has a slope of 2/3, then a perpendicular line's slope must be -2/3, and vice versa.
Lines r and m are parallel or line r is line m continued
anos.(squiggly line over the n "~")
The squiggly line is called a 'tilde', in case that helps. It's on your keyboard with the #, but as a dash, ~, not over the 'n'.
On a mac, it's option+n, then press n. On a windows vista, it's command+alt+164. And the "n with the squiggly thing over it" is called eñe (pronounced en-nyay). You could also enter "Ctrl + Shift + Squiggly line (on upper left hand corner)" simultaneously, let go, then push "n".
That squiggly line, specifically over the N. It gives the N that "ny" sound. Instead of pronuncing SEN-OR, you pronounce it SEN-YOR.
ewan??
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.
The squiggly line under the letter "n" in "français" is called a cedilla. It is used to indicate that the "c" is soft and pronounced as "s."
If you mean the n with a squiggly line on top, it's pronounced en-yay.
the Spanish word for crankshaft is 'cigunal' and the u has 2 dots over it and the n has a squiggly line on top
Use the alt code: ALT+0241Copy the letter into your document: ñHope this helps!
People from Madrid are madrilenos, with a tilde (looks like a squiggly line) over the n. That is, madrileños (or madrileñas, if they're female.)
A squiggly mark is often referred to as a tilde '~'. It is commonly used in writing and mathematics to indicate approximation, negation, or as a diacritic mark in some languages.