FACTOID # 59: People might eat oats when they're hungry, but people from Hungary don't eat oats.
 
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Encyclopedia > Nasal consonants
Manners of articulation
Nasal consonant
Stop consonant
Fricative consonant
Lateral consonant
Approximant consonant
Semivowel
Liquid consonant
Flap consonant
Trill consonant
Ejective consonant
Implosive consonant
Click consonant
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A nasal consonant is produced when the velum-- that fleshy part of the palate near the back --is lowered, allowing air to escape freely through the nose. The oral cavity still acts as a resonance chamber for the sound, but the air does not escape through the mouth as it is blocked by the tongue. Thus, it is not the nose itself that differentiates between the nasals, but rather the tongue's articulation. Air escapes through both the mouth and the nose during the prodcution of a nasal vowel.


Nasal consonants are sonorants, (as are laterals, approximants, and vowels), meaning they do not restrict the escape of the air. (Compare with stop consonants, which block off the air completely, and fricatives, which force the air through a narrow channel...both stops and fricatives are known as obstruents.)


Acoustically, nasals have bands of energy at around 200 and 2,000 Hz.



List of nasal consonants:


  Results from FactBites:
 
Nasal consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (706 words)
A nasal stop is produced when the velum—that fleshy part of the palate near the back—is lowered, allowing air to escape freely through the nose.
When a language is claimed to lack nasal consonants altogether, as with several Niger-Congo languages, or the Pirahã language of the Amazon, nasal and non-nasal consonants usually alternate allophonically, and it is a theoretical claim on the part of the individual linguist that the nasal version is not the basic form of the consonant.
However, several of the Chimakuan, Salish, and Wakashan languages surrounding Puget Sound, such as Quileute, Lushootseed, and Makah, are truly without any nasalization at all, in consonants or vowels, except in special speech registers such as baby-talk or the archaic speech of mythological figures (and perhaps not even that in the case of Quileute).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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