Palatal nasal
Encyclopedia : P : PA : PAL : Palatal nasal
| IPA – number | 118 |
| IPA – text | |
| IPA – image | |
| Entity | ɲ |
| X-SAMPA | J |
| Kirshenbaum | n^ |
Features
Features of the palatal nasal:
- Its manner of articulation is stop, which means it is produced by obstructing airflow in the vocal tract.
- Its place of articulation is palatal which means it is articulated with the middle or back part of the tongue raised against the hard palate.
- Its phonation type is voiced, which means the vocal cords are vibrating during the articulation.
- It is a nasal consonant, which means air is allowed to escape through the nose.
- It is a central consonant, which means it is produced by allowing the airstream to flow over the middle of the tongue, rather than the sides.
- The airstream mechanism is pulmonic egressive, which means it is articulated by pushing air out of the lungs and through the vocal tract, rather than from the glottis or the mouth.
In English
In some dialects of English, the sequence /nj/ is sometimes realized as the palatal nasal plus a [j]-like offglide, via coalescence, a type of assimilation. For example, onion /ˈʌnjən/ might be realized as [ˈʌɲjən] or canyon /ˈkænjən/ might be realized as [ˈkæɲjən]. However, there are no minimal pairs for [nj] and [ɲj], so the palatal nasal is not a separate phoneme in English.
In other languages
Romance languages
A combination of the palatal nasal with a [j]-like offglide is fairly common in Romance languages:Catalan
Catalan has [ɲ] as a phoneme, and it is denoted byFrench
French has [ɲ] or perhaps [ɲj] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by
Istro-Romanian has [ɲ] or perhaps [ɲj] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by <ń>.
Italian has [ɲ] or perhaps [ɲj] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by
Portuguese has [ɲ] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by
Spanish has the palatal nasal as a phoneme in many dialects, and this is denoted by <ñ>, as in mañana [maɲana] (tomorrow). However, in Mexico <ñ> is a palatalized alveolar nasal, [nʲ]. The difference is this: a true palatal is pronounced with contact between the middle of the tongue and the palate. The front of the tongue is not involved. In a palatalized alveolar (or dental), it is the front of the tongue that makes the contact, as in [n], but the middle of the tongue is simultaneously raised toward the palate, as in [j]. That is, [nʲ] is pronounced like a simultaneous [n] and [j], while [ɲ] or perhaps [ɲj] is palatal, though it may have a [j]-like offglide.
Galician has [ɲ] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by <ñ>, as in año (/a'ɲo/) - lamb.
The Eastern dialects of Finnish, but not the standard language, retain the feature of palatalization, and the palatal nasal is the palatalized version of /n/. When the palatal nasal is in the position where standard Finnish would use
Hungarian has [ɲ] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by
This sound also occurs in Slavic languages, for example in Belarusian and Russian нь, Serbian њ/nj, Polish ń, Croatian nj, and Slovak and Czech ň.
In Czech and Slovak, it is also pronounced in ni [ɲɪ], ní [ɲi:] and in Czech ně and Slovak ne - both pronounced as [ɲɛ].
In Polish, it is also pronounced in ni [ɲi], nia [ɲa], nie [ɲe], nio [ɲɔ] and niu [ɲu].
This sound is written like Ņ ņ.
Vietnamese has [ɲ] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.Occitan
Occitan has [ɲ] or perhaps [ɲj] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by Istro-Romanian
Italian
Portuguese
Spanish
Galician
Uralic Languages
This phenome is also present in several Uralic Languages of the Finno-Urgic variety:Finnish
Hungarian
Slavic languages
Latvian
Vietnamese
See also
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