'n

Conjunction

 * fish 'n chips
 * rock 'n roll
 * rock 'n roll

Conjunction

 * 1)   (As found in .)

Etymology
From.

Usage notes

 * This word is not capitalized at the beginning of a sentence and the following word is capitalized instead.

Usage notes
While this contraction still reflects the elision that often occurs in en when it is between a word ending in a vowel and a word beginning in a consonant, this spelling was dropped by the Academy of the Asturian Language in 1990. Thus, the normative spelling of the above example is now Toi viviendo en Cangues.

Etymology 1
Merged unstressed form of and  or.

Article

 * 1) a
 * 2) the

Etymology 2
Unstressed form of.

Pronoun

 * 1) him
 * 2) it

Etymology 1
Like virtually all traditional German dialects, colloquial standard German distinguishes the indefinite article from the numeral for "one". The specific form has spread from the North southward and is thus of chiefly  origin. Most High German dialects use forms without the final -n, such as or, at least for the basic form (i.e. the masculine and neuter nominative). These pronunciations are sometimes heard in colloquial standard German as well, but is clearly the commonest form.

Etymology 2
Contraction of.

Adverb

 * 1)  short for  (used for general emphasis)

Etymology
Apheresis of.

Article

 * 1) a, an

Etymology
Apheresis of, from.

Preposition

 * 1) in

Determiner

 * 1) our.

Pronoun

 * 1) us

Usage notes

 * In formal Welsh, the contraction is a valid form of  found after mostly functional vowel-final words. In colloquial Welsh,  is often contracted to  after almost any vowel-final word.
 * Pronomial (and ) can occur before any verbal noun. Before verbal, pronomial  is found only in formal language after certain vowel-final preverbal particles, such as, , , ,  and.

Etymology
An unstressed variety of.

Determiner

 * 1) a (indefinite article)