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Everything about The Velar Nasal totally explained

The velar nasal is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ŋ, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is N.
   As a phoneme, the velar nasal doesn't occur in many of the indigenous languages of the Americas, nor in a large number of European or Middle Eastern languages. While almost all languages have /m/ and /n/, only about half have a velar nasal. As with the voiced velar plosive, the relative rarity of the velar nasal is undoubtedly due to the fact that the small oral cavity used to produce velar consonants makes it more difficult for voicing to be sustained. It also makes it much more difficult to allow air to escape through the nose as is required for a nasal consonant.
   In many languages that don't have the velar nasal as a phoneme, it occurs as an allophone of /n/ before velar consonants.

Features

Features of the velar nasal:
The IPA symbol is a lowercase letter n with a leftward tail protruding from the bottom of the right stem of the letter. Compare n and ŋ. Both the symbol and the sound are commonly called as "eng" or "engma" and sometimes in reference to Greek, "angma". The symbol ŋ shouldn't 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 ɲ, the symbol for the palatal nasal, which has a leftward-pointing hook extending from the bottom of the left stem.

Varieties of [ŋ]

IPA Description
ŋ plain ŋ
ŋ̊ voiceless ŋ
ŋ̍ syllabic ŋ
ŋ̈ breathy voiced ŋ
ŋ̃ creaky voiced ŋ
ŋʷ labialized ŋ

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Aleut chaang [tʃɑːŋ] 'five'
Bai Dali dialect ? [ŋv˩˧] 'fish'
Chinese Cantonese /gang2 [kɐŋ˧˥] 'flower stem' See Standard Cantonese
Mandarin 北京/Běijīng [peɪ˨˩tɕiŋ˥˥] 'Beijing' See Standard Mandarin
Catalan sa'ng [saŋ] 'blood' See Catalan phonology
Chukchi ңыроқ [ŋəɹoq] 'two'
Czech tank [taŋk] 'tank' See Czech phonology
Dinka ŋa [ŋa] 'who'
Dutch angst [ɑŋst] 'fear' See Dutch phonology
English sing [sɪŋ] 'sing' Restricted to the syllable coda. See English phonology
Fijian gone [ˈŋone] 'child'
Finnish langan [lɑŋːɑn] 'of the thread' See Finnish phonology
French parking [paʀkiŋ] 'parking lot' See French phonology
Galician unha [ˈuŋa] 'one', 'a' (feminine)
German lang [laŋ] 'long' See German phonology
Greek αποτυγχάνω [aˌpo̞tiŋˈxano̞] 'I fail (to fail)' See Modern Greek phonology
Hebrew בנק [baŋk] 'bank' Allophone of /n/ before velar consonants. See Hebrew phonology
Hindi रङ्ग [rəŋg] 'color' See Hindi-Urdu phonology
Hungarian ing [iŋg] 'shirt' See Hungarian phonology
Icelandic ng [ˈkøyŋk] ? See Icelandic phonology
Indonesian bangun [baŋun] 'wake up'
Irish ceann carrach [caŋˈkaɾˠəx] 'a scabbed one' See Irish phonology
Italian anche [ˈaŋke] 'also' See Italian phonology
Itelmen қниң [qniŋ] 'one'
Japanese Standard 南極/nankyoku [naŋkʲokɯ] 'the South Pole' See Japanese phonology
Eastern dialects /kagi [kaŋi] 'key'
Ket аяң [ajaŋ] 'to damn'
Korean /bang [paŋ] 'room' See Korean phonology
Nivkh ңамг [ŋamg] 'seven'
Norwegian gang [gɑŋ] 'hallway' See Norwegian phonology
Polish bank [baŋk] 'bank' See Polish phonology
Occitan Provençal vin [viŋ] 'wine'
Seri comcáac [koŋˈkaak] 'Seri people'
Shona 'nanga [ŋaŋga] 'witch-doctor'
Slovene tank [taŋk] 'tank'
Spanish domingo [d̪o̞ˈmiŋgo̞] 'Sunday' See Spanish phonology
Swahili ng'ombe [ŋɔmbɛ] 'cow'
Swedish bank [baŋkʰ] 'bank' See Swedish phonology
Vietnamese ưng [ɯŋ] 'to accept' See Vietnamese phonology

Further Information

Get more info on 'Velar Nasal'.


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