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tilde
[ til-duh ]
noun
- Phonetics, Orthography. a diacritic (~) placed over an n, as in Spanish mañana, to indicate a palatal nasal sound or over a vowel, as in Portuguese são, to indicate nasalization.
- Mathematics. a symbol (∼) indicating equivalency or similarity between two values.
- Logic. a similar symbol indicating negation.
tilde
/ ˈtɪldə /
noun
- the diacritical mark (~) placed over a letter to indicate a palatal nasal consonant, as in Spanish señor. This symbol is also used in the International Phonetic Alphabet to represent any nasalized vowel
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Word History and Origins
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Word History and Origins
Origin of tilde1
C19: from Spanish, from Latin titulus title, superscription
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Example Sentences
When media used his full name, they omitted the tilde in “Cañedo.”
From Los Angeles Times
Batiste, who is not a native Spanish speaker, was nervous about navigating the tildes and the rolling Rs.
From Los Angeles Times
At the beginning of each episode, Saldaña's name is shown with a tilde over the n.
From Reuters
For the same reason the council also struck down the bill's proposal to allow non-French so-called diacritical marks such as the tilde, in official documents.
From Reuters
While the tilde also never reached critical mass, cutesy emoji faces achieved global dominance, even among business associates.
From New York Times
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