*Naudiz is the reconstructed Proto-Germanic name of the n-rune , meaning "need, distress". In the Anglo-Saxon futhorc, it is continued as nyd, in the Younger Futhark as , Icelandic naud and Old Norse nauðr. The corresponding Gothic letter is ð½ n, named nauþs.
The rune may have been an original innovation, or it may have been adapted from the Rhaetic's alphabet's N.
The valkyrie SigrdrÃÂfa in SigrdrÃÂfumál talks (to Sigurd) about the rune as a beer-rune and that "You should learn beer-runes if you donâÂÂt want another manâÂÂs wife to abuse your trust if you have a tryst. Carve them on the drinking-horn and on the back of your hand, and carve the rune á¾ on your fingernail."
The rune is recorded in all three rune poems: