In phonetics, nasalisation (or nasalization in American English) is the production of a sound while the soft palate is lowered, so that some air escapes through the nose during the production of the sound by the mouth. An archetypal nasal sound is .
In the International Phonetic Alphabet, nasalisation is indicated by printing a tilde diacritic above the symbol for the sound to be nasalised: is the nasalised equivalent of , and is the nasalised equivalent of . A subscript diacritic , called an ogonek or nosinė, is sometimes seen, especially when the vowel bears tone marks that would interfere with the superscript tilde. For example, are more legible in most fonts than .
In Coatzospan Mixtec, fricatives and affricates are nasalized before nasal vowels even when they are voiceless. That is cognate with a nasalised palatal approximant in other Athabaskan languages.
In Umbundu language, phonemic contrasts with the (allophone) nasalised approximant and so is likely to be a true fricative rather than an approximant. In Old Irish and Middle Irish, the lenition was a nasalised bilabial fricative .
Ganza language has a phonemic nasalized glottal stop while Sundanese has it allophonically; nasalised stops can occur only with pharyngeal articulation or lower, or they would be simple nasals. Nasal flap consonant are common allophonically. Many West African languages have a nasal flap (or ) as an allophone of before a nasal vowel; voiced retroflex nasal flaps are common intervocalic allophones of in South Asian languages.
A nasal trill has been described from some dialects of Romanian, and is posited as an intermediate historical step in rhotacism. However, the phonetic variation of the sound is considerable, and it is not clear how frequently it is actually trilled. Some languages contrast like Toro-tegu Dogon and Inor. A nasal lateral has been reported for some languages, Nzema language contrasts , Nemi language contrasts .
Other languages, such as the Khoisan languages of Khoekhoe and Gǀui, as well as several of the !Kung languages, include nasal click consonants. Nasal clicks are typically with a nasal or superscript nasal preceding the consonant (for example, velar-dental or and uvular-dental or ). Nasalised laterals such as (a nasalised lateral alveolar click) are easy to produce but rare or nonexistent as phonemes; nasalised lateral clicks are common in Southern African languages such as Zulu language. Often when is nasalised, it becomes .
An upright tilde is used for this in the extensions to the IPA: is a voiced alveolar nasal fricative, with no airflow out of the mouth; this will generally occur when is intended. is an oral fricative with simultaneous nasal frication; this will generally occur when is intended.
No known language makes use of nasal fricatives in non-disordered speech.
is a sound partway between and .
Contextual nasalisation can lead to the addition of nasal vowel phonemes to a language. That happened in French, most of whose final consonants disappeared, but its final nasals made the preceding vowels become nasal, which introduced a new distinction into the language. An example is vin blanc , ultimately from Latin vinum and blancum.
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