Puneet Varma (Editor)

Eng (letter)

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Eng (letter)

Eng or engma (capital: Ŋ, lowercase: ŋ) is a letter of the Latin alphabet, used to represent a velar nasal (as in English singing) in the written form of some languages and in the International Phonetic Alphabet.

Contents

History

The First Grammatical Treatise, a 12th-century work on the phonology of the Old Icelandic language, uses a single grapheme for the eng sound, shaped like a g with a stroke ⟨g⟩. Alexander Gill the Elder uses an uppercase G with a hooked tail and a lowercase n with the hooked tail of a script g ⟨ŋ⟩ for the same sound in Logonomia Anglica in 1619. William Holder uses the letter in Elements of speech: An essay of inquiry into the natural production of letters, published in 1669, but it was not printed as intended; he indicates in his errata that “there was intended a character for Ng, viz., n with a tail like that of g, which must be understood where the Printer has imitated it by n or y”. It was later used in Benjamin Franklin's phonetic alphabet, with its current phonetic value.

Appearance

Lowercase eng is derived from n, with the addition of a hook to the right leg, somewhat like that of j. The uppercase has two variants: it can be based on the usual uppercase N, with a hook added (or "N-form"); or it can be an enlarged version of the lowercase (or "n-form"). The former is preferred in Sami languages that use it, the latter in African languages, such as in Shona from 1931–1955.

Early printers, lacking a specific glyph for eng, sometimes approximated it by rotating a capital G, or by substituting a Greek eta (η) for it (encoded in Unicode as the Latin letter n with long leg: Ƞ ƞ).

Technical transcription

  • Americanist phonetic notation, where it may also represent a uvular nasal.
  • Sometimes for the transcription of Australian Aboriginal languages
  • International Phonetic Alphabet
  • Uralic Phonetic Alphabet
  • Rheinische Dokumenta, a phonetic alphabet for many West Central German dialects, Low Rhenish, and few related languages.
  • Vernacular orthographies

    Languages marked † no longer use eng, but formerly did.

  • African languages
  • Bari
  • Bemba
  • Dinka
  • Ewe
  • Fula
  • Ganda
  • Manding languages
  • Songhay languages
  • Tonga
  • Wolof
  • American languages
  • Inupiat
  • Lakota
  • O'odham
  • Australian Aboriginal languages
  • Bandjalang
  • Yolngu
  • Languages of China
  • Zhuang† (replaced by the digraph ng in 1986)
  • Sami languages
  • Inari Sami
  • Lule Sami
  • Northern Sami
  • Skolt Sami
  • Kildin Sami (during Latinisation in the 1930s)
  • Turkic languages during Latinisation in the 1930s used Ꞑ ꞑ, sometimes considered a variant of eng.
  • Mapuche language (Wirizüŋun script)
  • Computer encoding

    Eng is encoded in Unicode as U+014A LATIN CAPITAL LETTER ENG and U+014B LATIN SMALL LETTER ENG, part of the Latin Extended-A range. In ISO 8859-4 (Latin-4) it's located at BD (uppercase) and BF (lowercase).

    In African languages such as Bemba, ng' (with an apostrophe) is widely used as a substitute in media where eng is hard to reproduce.

    References

    Eng (letter) Wikipedia