Aicme Muine

Muin

Sound: M

🌿 Tree / meaning: Bramble

Strokes crossing the stem line diagonally.

What is Muin?

Muin (pronounced approximately as its Latin equivalent, M) is one of the letters of the ancient Ogham alphabet, the edge-carved writing system used in early medieval Ireland and Britain. It belongs to the Aicme Muine — one of five groupings that make up the full 25-letter Ogham script.

In the traditional Celtic tree calendar associated with Ogham, Muin is linked to the Bramble. Each Ogham letter carries not just a phonetic value but a natural symbol — a feature that makes Ogham unique among ancient European writing systems.

How to Write Muin

In the Aicme Muine, strokes are drawn diagonally across the central stem line (the druim).

Ogham is traditionally written bottom-to-top along the edge of a standing stone. In modern horizontal use — as seen in tattoos, jewellery, and digital text — the script reads left-to-right.

The Unicode Character

Muin is encoded in Unicode as part of the Ogham block (U+1680–U+169F). The character for Muin is:

Latin equivalent: M

Aicme: Aicme Muine

Tree: Bramble

Names Containing This Sound

Here are some names that use the M sound — you can see Muin in the transliteration:

Try It in the Translator

Type any name or word into our free Ogham translator to see Muin and the other letters in action.