n
	英 [en]
美 [ɛn]
	    
		英文词源
	
	- N
 - in nickname, newt, and British dialectal naunt, the -n- belongs to a preceding indefinite article an or possessive pronoun mine.
 
 Other examples of this from Middle English manuscripts include a neilond ("an island," early 13c.), a narawe ("an arrow," c. 1400), a nox ("an ox," c. 1400), a noke ("an oak," early 15c.), a nappyle ("an apple," early 15c.), a negge ("an egg," 15c.). In 16c., an idiot sometimes became a nidiot, which, with still-common casual pronunciation, became nidget, which, alas, has not survived.
 
 The process also worked in surnames, from oblique cases of Old English at "by, near," as in Nock/Nokes/Noaks from atten Oke "by the oak;" Nye from atten ye "near the lowland;" and see Nashville.
 
 But it is more common for an English word to lose an -n- to a preceding a: apron, auger, adder, umpire, humble pie, etc. The mathematical use of n for "an indefinite number" is first recorded 1852, in to the nth power. 
 
		双语例句
	
	- 1. " N " is a syllabic consonant in " button " . 
  - 在 button 这个词里n是 构成音节的辅音.
  来自《简明英汉词典》
 
- 2. M is twice as large as N. 
  - M等于N的两倍.
  来自《现代英汉综合大词典》
 
- 3. Ayer started N. W. Ayer & Son in 1869, naming the firm for his father. 
  - 艾尔在1869年成立了N.W.艾尔父子公司,公司以他父亲的名字命名。
  来自柯林斯例句
 
- 4. The N pole and S pole of two magnets will attract each other. 
  - 两个磁体的N极和S极互相吸引.
  来自《简明英汉词典》
 
- 5. Rock'n'roll has become so commercialised and safe since punk. 
  - 摇滚乐自从朋克乐以后就已经过于商业化而缺乏新意了。
  来自柯林斯例句