It is an accent mark, it this case it's an E with an acute accent.
you need a french keyboard i think
The accent mark over the letter "e" is called an acute accent. It is used in various languages to indicate stress or pronunciation changes.
The English word "arithmetic" carries no accent mark. The equivalent Spanish word 'aritmetica' has an accent over the 'e'.
Quien, with an accent mark over the "e".
It emphasizes the part of the word where the accent is. for example Ingles. Without the accent it would simply be "Ingles." But the accent originally goes over the e. So you say the E with emphasis. "InglEs".
γέλιο (pronounced "gelio" with an accent mark over the e)
Que (the E has an accent mark over it...) coche tienes?
Yes, the name "José" has an accent mark in Spanish to differentiate it from the name "Jose" which does not have an accent. The accent mark changes the pronunciation of the letter "e" in the name.
Originally French, where each "e" had an accent mark over it. It then became French Canadian with only an accent mark on the last "e," until eventually dropping both accent marks all together.
the accent mark over the n in spanish is pronunced 'enyeh'. It is called the virgulilla. It is often said that it is a tilde but it is not. The tilde is on an e, i, o, u, and a.
The accent mark in "régime" goes above the letter "e," as in "régime."