Nearly all nasal consonants are nasal occlusives, in which air escapes through the nose but not through the mouth, as it is blocked (occluded) by the lips or tongue. The oral cavity still acts as a resonance chamber for the sound. Rarely, non-occlusive consonants may be
nasalized. Most nasals are
voiced, and in fact, the nasal sounds and are among the most common sounds cross-linguistically. Voiceless nasals occur in a few languages such as
Burmese,
Welsh,
Icelandic and
Guaraní. (Compare oral
stops, which block off the air completely, and
fricatives, which obstruct the air with a narrow channel. Both stops and fricatives are more commonly voiceless than voiced, and are known as
obstruents.) In terms of acoustics, nasals are
sonorants, which means that they do not significantly restrict the escape of air (as it can freely escape out the nose). However, nasals are also
obstruents in their articulation because the flow of air through the mouth is blocked. This duality, a sonorant airflow through the nose along with an obstruction in the mouth, means that nasal occlusives behave both like sonorants and like obstruents. For example, nasals tend to pattern with other sonorants such as and , but in many languages, they may develop from or into stops. Acoustically, nasals have bands of energy at around 200 and 2,000 Hz. 1. The symbol is commonly used to represent the
dental nasal as well, rather than , as it is rarely distinguished from the
alveolar nasal. Examples of languages containing nasal occlusives: The voiced retroflex nasal is a common sound in
Languages of South Asia and
Australian Aboriginal languages. The voiced palatal nasal is a common sound in
European languages, such as:
Spanish ,
French and
Italian ,
Catalan and
Hungarian ,
Czech and
Slovak ,
Polish ,
Occitan and
Portuguese , and (before a vowel)
Modern Greek . Many
Germanic languages, including
German,
Dutch,
English and
Swedish, as well as
varieties of Chinese such as
Mandarin and
Cantonese, have , and .
Malayalam has a six-fold distinction between ; some speakers also have a . The
Nuosu language also contrasts six categories of nasals, . They are represented in romanisation by . Nuosu also contrasts prenasalised stops and affricates with their voiced, unvoiced, and aspirated versions. /ɱ/ is the rarest voiced nasal to be phonemic, as it is mostly an allophone of other nasals before labiodentals. Currently, there is only 1 reported language,
Kukuya, which distinguishes and also a set of prenasalized consonants like .
Yuanmen used to have it phonemically before merging it with . Catalan,
Occitan, Spanish, and Italian have as
phonemes, and as allophones. It may also be claimed that Catalan has phonemic , at least on the basis of
Central Catalan forms such as , although the only minimal pairs involve foreign
proper nouns. Also, among many younger speakers of
Rioplatense Spanish, the palatal nasal has been lost, replaced by a cluster , as in English
canyon. In
Brazilian Portuguese and
Angolan Portuguese , written , is typically pronounced as , a
nasal palatal approximant, a nasal glide (in
Polish, this feature is also possible as an allophone). Semivowels in
Portuguese often nasalize before and always after nasal vowels, resulting in and . What would be
coda nasal occlusives in other
West Iberian languages is only slightly pronounced before
dental consonants. Outside this environment the nasality is spread over the vowel or become a nasal diphthong (
mambembe , outside the
final, only in Brazil, and
mantém in all Portuguese dialects). The
Japanese syllabary kana , typically romanized as
n and occasionally
m, can manifest as one of several different nasal consonants depending on what consonant follows it; this allophone, colloquially written in IPA as , is known as the
moraic nasal, per the language's moraic structure.
Welsh has a set of voiceless nasals, , which occur predominantly as a result of
nasal mutation of their voiced counterparts (). The
Mapos Buang language of New Guinea has a phonemic uvular nasal, /ɴ/, which contrasts with a velar nasal. It is extremely rare for a language to have /ɴ/ as a phoneme. The distinction also occurs in a few
Inuit languages like
Iñupiaq.
Chamdo languages like
Lamo (Kyilwa dialect),
Larong sMar (Tangre Chaya dialect),
Drag-yab sMar (Razi dialect) have an extreme distinction of , also one of the few languages to have a .
Yanyuwa is highly unusual in that it has a seven-way distinction between (
palato-alveolar), (
front velar), and (
back velar). This may be the only language in existence that contrasts nasals at seven distinct points of articulation.
Yélî Dnye also has an extreme contrast of . The term 'nasal occlusive' (or 'nasal stop') is generally abbreviated to
nasal. However, there are also nasalized fricatives, nasalized flaps,
nasal glides, and
nasal vowels, as in French, Portuguese, and Polish. In the
IPA, nasal vowels and nasalized consonants are indicated by placing a tilde (~) over the vowel or consonant in question: French
sang , Portuguese
bom , Polish
wąż . ==Voiceless nasals==