What is the squiggle over the n in Senorita?

What is the squiggle over the letter N in Spanish? The squiggle over the letter Ñ in Spanish is called a tilde (also referred to as a virgulilla in Spanish).

What is a Nina in crosswords?

A Nina is a special feature of the crossword grid: a word, words or phrase hidden within a pattern of cells in the completed grid.

What do ellipses mean in cryptic crosswords?

Some crosswords use the ellipsis (…). If one clue finishes with an ellipsis and the next clue starts with one, the inference is that the two clues are connected. Sometimes they are and you will have to solve one in order to solve the other but in many cases the two clues can be read independently.

What is the Ñ symbol called?

Ñ, ñ (called eñe or N with a tilde) is a grapheme used in Spanish and in several other languages using the Roman alphabet to indicate the sound which in the International Phonetic Alphabet is written [ɲ], corresponding approximately to the ny in English canyon.

What are cryptic puzzles?

A cryptic crossword is a crossword puzzle in which each clue is a word puzzle.

What do three dots mean in a crossword?

The clues get solved independently, just as if there were no ellipses connecting them. Don’t dismiss those three dots too soon though. In advanced cryptics like the barred grid kind and in the harder daily puzzles, they sometimes indicate a real link – a cryptic relation between the clues.

What do quotation marks mean in cryptic crosswords?

The comma has no role in the cryptic reading. Guardian 24802 (Araucaria): No time to ask “Why’s head visible?” ( 2,4) IN VIEW. INVITE (ask) – T (time), W (head of ‘why’). The quotes have no role in the cryptic reading.

What do quotation marks mean in crosswords?

If a clue is enclosed in quotation marks, it means the clue should be interpreted as something uttered rather than as a meaning.

What does anag mean in crosswords?

With an anagram clue, you have to rearrange the letters of one or more words to give the solution. Anagram clues are sometimes encountered in ‘straight’ crosswords, with clues presented like this: Cheap (anag.) ( 5)