nasal consonant การใช้
- A voiced alveolar nasal consonant ( in IPA ) is notated as
- Nasal speech is performed with the nasal consonant [ n ].
- Nasal consonants usually have an additional formant around 2500 Hz.
- Ewe is therefore sometimes said to have no nasal consonants.
- It was caused by a preceding word ending in a nasal consonant.
- Vowels assimilate to surrounding nasal consonants in many languages, such as Apurin?
- Nasal consonants only arise in daughter languages when followed by a nasal vowel.
- At the beginning of a word, the nasal consonant is subsequently lost.
- The nasal consonant / m / is pronounced the same as in Spanish.
- Here the nasality of the vowel is separated out as a nasal consonant.
- The nasal consonants are not distinctive, as they only appear before nasal vowels.
- Although Supyire contains nasal consonants, there is considerable debate over their phonemic status.
- In addition some vowels are contrastively nasal consonants.
- When final nasal consonants are deleted, nasality is maintained on the preceding vowel.
- C can be any consonant, whereas C 1 must be a nasal consonant.
- A word final vowel becomes nasal when it is preceded by a nasal consonant.
- However, an initial nasal consonant is not always pronounced with a low pitch.
- A Javanese syllable can have the following nasal consonant ), and V = vowel.
- Stops are voiced when following nasal consonants.
- Nasal consonants are shown both unmarked and with the diacritic " kai ".
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