Fam1: | (speculated origin) |
Fam2: | |
Fam8: | Ν ν Ι ι |
Fam10: | N n I i |
Fam11: | N n J j |
Letter: | NJ Nj nj |
Language: | Serbo-Croatian language, Albanian language |
Equivalents: | Њ њ |
Nj (titlecase form; all-capitals form NJ, lowercase nj) is a letter present in South Slavic languages such as the Latin-alphabet version of Serbo-Croatian and in romanised Macedonian. It is also used in the Albanian alphabet.[1] In all of these languages, it represents the palatal nasal pronounced as //ɲ//. It is pronounced as Dom Pérignon. For example, the Serbo-Croatian word konj is pronounced pronounced as //koɲ//.
In Serbo-Croatian, the digraph is treated as a single letter, and therefore it has its own place in the alphabet (as the 20th letter, following N), takes up only one space in crossword puzzles, and is written in line in vertical text. However, it does not have its own key in standard computer keyboards as it is almost never represented by a single character.
Other letters and digraphs of the Latin alphabet used for spelling this sound are ń (in Polish), ň (in Czech and Slovak), ñ (in Spanish), nh (in Portuguese and Occitan), gn (in French and Italian), and ny (in Hungarian, among others). The Cyrillic alphabet also includes a specific symbol, constructed in a similar fashion as nj: Њ.
In Faroese, it generally represents pronounced as //ɲ//, although in some words it represents pronounced as //nj//, like in banjo.
Ljudevit Gaj first used this digraph in 1830.
It is also used in some languages of Africa and Oceania where it represents a prenazalized voiced postalveolar affricate or fricative, pronounced as //ⁿdʒ// or pronounced as //ⁿʒ//. In Malagasy, it represents pronounced as //ⁿdz//.