Ń


Ń is a letter formed by putting an acute accent over the letter N. In the Belarusian
Łacinka alphabet; the alphabets of Polish, Kashubian, Wymysorys and the Sorbian languages; and the romanization of Khmer, it represents, which is the same as Czech and Slovak ň, Serbo-Croatian and Albanian nj, Spanish and Galician ñ, Italian and French gn, Hungarian and Catalan ny, and Portuguese nh. In Yoruba, it is used to connect a pronoun to a verb. For example, when using the pronoun I and the verb to eat, it would be, mo ń jeun. It is pronounced with a distinct un sound.
In Lule Sami it represents /ŋ/. It is used in the Yale romanisation of Cantonese when the nasal syllable /ŋ̩/ has a rising tone.
In Kazakh, it was proposed in 2018 to replace the Cyrillic Ң by this Latin alphabet and represents /ŋ/. The replace suggestion has modified to Ŋ in the later 2019.

In Polish

In Polish, it appears directly after n in the alphabet, but no Polish word begins with this letter, because it may not appear before a vowel. In the former case, a digraph ni is used to indicate a palatal n. If the vowel following is i, only one i appears.

Examples

HTML characters and Unicode code point numbers:
In Unicode, Ń and ń are located the "Latin Extended-A" block.