From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Merge with Ng (letter)

I created the Ng (letter) to follow the nomenclature of other articles: Nj (letter), Esh (letter), but wasn't aware of this one. Now there's more articles using (letter) than (digraph). Which way should the merge go? --- moyogo 10:13, 16 May 2006 (UTC) reply

I'd prefer (digraph). Many languages use it, but not all of them recognize it as a letter... The term "digraph" can be based on its origin as a combination of n + g, without referring to its status in any particular language.
( Nj (letter) should probably be moved to Nj (digraph), too, although esh (letter) can stay where it is since it's a single glyph.) -- Ptcamn 10:33, 16 May 2006 (UTC) reply
Ok, I guess digraph is better, as long as its meaning is inclusive of letter. --- moyogo 10:56, 16 May 2006 (UTC) reply

Ng in Swedish

It's to my understanding that ng is a distinct phoneme in Swedish as well (representing the /ŋ/ sound), but I'm not exactly sure. Maybe a native Swede or someone else who has great experience with the language can clarify? -- Wikiwow 20:56, 25 September 2006 (UTC) reply

ng, nng, mng, ngng, ngm, ngn in Eskimo-Aleut

Uqaunngittunga (I do not speak) nngi `not`, Qamnguiyuq `snores`, Inuungnguaq `doll`, Ingmiqtuq, Iqalungni `In Fish`, etc ( 207.161.155.254 ( talk) 00:52, 18 January 2009 (UTC)). reply

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Merge with Ng (letter)

I created the Ng (letter) to follow the nomenclature of other articles: Nj (letter), Esh (letter), but wasn't aware of this one. Now there's more articles using (letter) than (digraph). Which way should the merge go? --- moyogo 10:13, 16 May 2006 (UTC) reply

I'd prefer (digraph). Many languages use it, but not all of them recognize it as a letter... The term "digraph" can be based on its origin as a combination of n + g, without referring to its status in any particular language.
( Nj (letter) should probably be moved to Nj (digraph), too, although esh (letter) can stay where it is since it's a single glyph.) -- Ptcamn 10:33, 16 May 2006 (UTC) reply
Ok, I guess digraph is better, as long as its meaning is inclusive of letter. --- moyogo 10:56, 16 May 2006 (UTC) reply

Ng in Swedish

It's to my understanding that ng is a distinct phoneme in Swedish as well (representing the /ŋ/ sound), but I'm not exactly sure. Maybe a native Swede or someone else who has great experience with the language can clarify? -- Wikiwow 20:56, 25 September 2006 (UTC) reply

ng, nng, mng, ngng, ngm, ngn in Eskimo-Aleut

Uqaunngittunga (I do not speak) nngi `not`, Qamnguiyuq `snores`, Inuungnguaq `doll`, Ingmiqtuq, Iqalungni `In Fish`, etc ( 207.161.155.254 ( talk) 00:52, 18 January 2009 (UTC)). reply


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