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10.5: The ñ

  • Page ID
    415683

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    The Ñ in Spanish

    The letter Ñ has a historical place in the Spanish language. Many Spanish words come from Latin, which had words that had two NNs together such as the word hispannia. To save time and space, those writing the words started to use a small line, called a tilde over one letter n. This evolved into the Ñ that is now a part of the Spanish language. The Ñ has a unique nasal sound. It sounds like the combination of ny in English like in the word canyon.

    To pronounce Ñ, place the front of your tongue against the top of your mouth, right behind the upper front teeth. Doing this should close the airway to your throat. As you try to speak, the air will flow through your nose, making this a more nasal sound than a regular n. Practice trying to pronounce this sound.

    Some Spanish words that include the ñ are:

    acompañar to accompany

    añadir to add

    año year

    bañar to bathe

    cañon canyon

    champiñon mushroom

    cumpleaños birthday

    dañar to damage

    diseño design

    enseñar to teach

    España Spain

    español Spanish (the language)

    español(a) Spanish (the nationality)

    extrañar to miss

    mañana morning

    montaña mountain

    niña girl

    niño boy

    otoño Autumn

    pestaña eyelash

    piña pineapple

    piñata pinata

    señor Mr.

    soñar to dream

    sueño dream

    With practice and patience you will be able to combine the tongue position and airflow to correctly produce the Ñ sound, which has a long history in the Spanish language and can be found in 15,000 Spanish words.

    Read the Spanish words in the list again. Then, answer the questions.

    Which word(s) have you heard before?

    Which word(s) is/are the most useful for you? Why?

    Which word(s) is/are the least useful for you? Why?

    Which word(s) is the most fun to say? Why?


    This page titled 10.5: The ñ is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by .

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