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Palatal nasal

Encyclopedia : P : PA : PAL : Palatal nasal


IPA – number 118
IPA – text
IPA – image Xsampa-J.png
Entity ɲ
X-SAMPA J
Kirshenbaum n^
The palatal nasal is a type of consonant, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ɲ, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is J. The IPA symbol is a lowercase letter n with a leftward-pointing tail protruding from the bottom of the left stem of the letter. Compare n and ɲ. The symbol ɲ should not be confused with ɳ, the symbol for the retroflex nasal, which has a rightward-pointing hook extending from the bottom of the right stem, or with ŋ, the symbol for the velar nasal, which has a leftward-pointing hook extending from the bottom of the right stem.

Features

Features of the palatal nasal:

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 by , like in Catalunya.

French

French has [ɲ] or perhaps [ɲj] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by .

Occitan

Occitan has [ɲ] or perhaps [ɲj] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by .

Istro-Romanian

Istro-Romanian has [ɲ] or perhaps [ɲj] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by <ń>.

Italian

Italian has [ɲ] or perhaps [ɲj] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by , as in gnocchi (a type of pasta).

Portuguese

Portuguese has [ɲ] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by , as in manhã [mɐɲɐ̃] (morning).

Spanish

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

Galician has [ɲ] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by <ñ>, as in año (/a'ɲo/) - lamb.

Uralic Languages

This phenome is also present in several Uralic Languages of the Finno-Urgic variety:

Finnish

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 , it is commonly written , for example mänj [mæɲ] or perhaps [mæɲj], compare standard language meni [meni]. [edit]

Hungarian

Hungarian has [ɲ] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by , as in Ottomány (/ɔt:ɔma:ɲ/). Even when in the final position, it retains its character as /ɲ/ and does not degenerate to /nj/. See also Hungarian ny.

Slavic languages

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], [ɲi:] and in Czech 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].

Latvian

This sound is written like Ņ ņ.

Vietnamese

Vietnamese has [ɲ] as a phoneme, and it is denoted by , as in nhai (/ɲaɪ/) - to chew.

See also

  Consonants (List, table) See also: IPA, Vowels  
Pulmonics Bilabial Lab'den. Dental Alveolar Postalv. Retroflex Palatal Velar Uvular Pharyn. Epiglottal Glottal   Non-pulmonics and other symbols
Nasals {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA  Clicks  {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA
Plosives {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA  Implo­­sives  {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA
Fricatives {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA  Ejec­­tives  {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA
   Approximants    {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA Other laterals  {{IPA {{IPA
Trills {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA Co-articulated approximants  {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA
Flaps & Taps {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA Co-articulated fricatives  {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA
Lat. Fricatives {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA Affricates  {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA
Lat. Appr'mants {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA Co-articulated stops  {{IPA {{IPA {{IPA
This page contains phonetic information in IPA, which may not display correctly in some browsers. [Help]
Where symbols appear in pairs, the one to the right represents a voiced consonant. Shaded areas denote pulmonic articulations judged impossible.

 


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