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N-apostrophe

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

N-apostrophe (ʼn, a letter ⟨n⟩ preceded by an apostrophe) is a digraph used in Afrikaans, a language spoken in South Africa and Namibia. The digraph is encoded in Unicode as precomposed character, U+0149 ʼn LATIN SMALL LETTER N PRECEDED BY APOSTROPHE, that is currently deprecated.[1] The Unicode standard recommends that a sequence of an apostrophe followed by n be used instead:[2] the use of deprecated characters such as ʼn is "strongly discouraged",[3] despite being maintained for residual CP853 compatibility. However it continues to be used in the Afrikaans versions of Facebook and other publications, probably to avoid the tendency of auto-correction software (designed for English quotation marks) to turn a typed 'n (straight apostrophe, n) into ‘n (left single quotation mark, n), which is incorrect but common (rather than the correct form, ’n). The code point has been removed from some computer fonts, such as Charis SIL and Doulos SIL.

Grammar

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The letter is the indefinite article of Afrikaans, and is pronounced as a schwa. The symbol itself came about as a contraction of its Dutch equivalent een meaning "one" (just as English an comes from Anglo-Saxon ān, also meaning "one").

Dit is ʼn boom.
[dət əs ə buəm]
It is a tree.

In Afrikaans, ʼn is never capitalised in standard texts. Instead, the first letter of the following word is capitalised.

ʼn Mens is hier.
A person is here.

An exception to this rule is in newspaper headlines, or sentences and phrases where all the letters are capitalised.

’N NASIONALE NOODTOESTAND
A NATIONAL EMERGENCY SITUATION

Miscellaneous

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The upper case, or majuscule form has never been included in any international keyboards and is not encoded as a precomposed character. It may be generated by combining (U+02BC ʼ MODIFIER LETTER APOSTROPHE) and N to create ʼN.

It is also a legacy compatibility character for the ISO/IEC 6937 and CP853 text encodings.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Unicode: List of deprecated characters
  2. ^ The Unicode Standard, chapter 7
  3. ^ "UAX #44: Unicode Character Database".