ǹg
interjection #128

Meanings

  1. 1 mm
  2. 2 hmm
  3. 3 uh-huh
  4. 4 yeah

Characters

Left (mouth) marks a vocalization; right supplies the nasal sound, reduced from a full ēn to a hum.

Examples

Ǹg, wǒ zhīdào le.
Mm, I see.
好的
Èn, hǎode.
Mm, alright.
Ńg? nǐ shuō shénme?
Huh? What did you say?

Tips

register
is a vocal hum, not a lexical word — the spelling stays the same but pitch contour carries the meaning. Falling or toneless (often written ńg or ǹg) is the everyday 'mm / uh-huh / yeah' of agreement and acknowledgement — by far the most common use. Rising becomes a query ('huh? what?'). Rising-falling can signal surprise. A flat first-tone is a low groan, rare in speech.
usage
Texting etiquette: a single bare in WeChat can read as cold, dismissive, or annoyed — the conversational equivalent of a one-word 'k'. Doubling to 嗯嗯 or adding 嗯好 / 嗯哼 warms it up. Use bare only in face-to-face speech or with people you're already close to.

Components

radical
kǒu
mouth
Left-side is the mouth radical — the universal flag for 'a voiced sound coming out of a mouth'. Almost every interjection and onomatopoeia carries it: , , , , , . Seeing on the left is your cue that this character is something you say, not something you do.
phonetic
ēn
kindness; favour
Right-side supplies the sound — ēn collapses to a nasal hum (ng / ńg / ǹg) with the vowel swallowed. The standalone meaning 'kindness' contributes nothing here; it's a pure sound borrow to spell out the grunt of acknowledgement. itself decomposes as + , but in it functions as a single sound block.

Stroke Order

ǹg