Gn (digraph)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gn is a digraph of the Latin Alphabet found in many languages.
In Latin, "gn" was pronounced [ŋn]. Latin velar-coronal digraphs like this (and also cl, cr, ct, gd, gl, gr, and x) underwent a palatal mutation to varying degrees in most Italo-Western Romance languages, and in most of those languages that preserve the gn spelling (such as Italian and French), it is pronounced as a palatal nasal [ɲ]. This was not the case in Dalmatian and the Eastern Romance languages where a different mutation changed the velar component to a labial consonant, changing the spelling in those languages to mn.
In English, the digraph is simply pronounced /n/ initially and finally(i.e. gnome, gnu, benign, sign). When it appears between two syllables, the /g/ is pronounced within the first syllable, while the /n/ is pronounced in the second syllable (i.e. signal).
In Norwegian, the digraph is pronounced [ŋn] in monosyllabic words like, "agn" and between two syllables, "tegne". The same spelling represents the same sound in Swedish too. Initially it is simply [gn], eg. Swedish gnista ['gnɪsta]]
[edit] See also
- GN (abbreviation)
- Ny (digraph)
- Ñ
|
|
---|---|
Digraphs |
Aa aa Ae ae Ai ai Au au Aw aw Ay ay Bh bh Ch ch Ck ck Cö cö Cs cs Cu cu Cz cz Dd dd Dh dh Dj dj Dx dx Dz dz Dž dž Dź dź Dż dż Ea ea Ee ee Ei ei Eu eu Ew ew Ey ey Ff ff Fh fh Gb gb Gh gh Għ għ Gi gi Gj gj Gn gn Gy gy Hs hs Hu hu Ie ie IJ ij Jö jö Kh kh Kp kp Ku ku Lh lh Lj lj Ll ll Ly ly Mb mb Mh mh Mp mp Nd nd Ng ng Nh nh Nj nj Nk nk Ns ns Nt nt Ny ny Nz nz Oa oa Oe oe Oi oi Oo oo Ou ou Ow ow Oy oy Ph ph Qu qu Rd rd Rh rh Rl rl Rn rn Rr rr Rt rt Rz rz Sh sh Sv sv Sy sy Sz sz Th th Tj tj Tr tr Ts ts Tx tx Ty ty Tz tz Ue ue Ui ui Vh vh Wh wh Xh xh Xö xö Yh yh Yk yk Zh zh Zs zs Zv zv |
Trigraphs |
C'h c'h Dzs dzs Eau eau Ngb ngb Ngh ngh Ngk ngk Nkp nkp Nth nth Nyk nyk Rnd rnd Sch sch |
Tetragraphs |