Nasalization in English: Nasal or Nasalized?
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- Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024
- In this video on nasalization in English, I will discuss the phonological environments in which one nasalizes vowels in English, while discussing the difference between ‘nasal vowels’ and ‘nasalized vowels’
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I REALLY LOVED IT!! THANK YOUUUU! I UNDERSTAND IT NOW!
Thanks for your comment, Potter,
See you every Wednesday :)
@@AzeLinguistics hello, if the vowels before a nasal stop is i, u or o, is it still nasalised?
@@ThatsBerky They are in English.
@@AzeLinguistics thanks for the answer! the only thing i don't understand is, does the vowel before a nasal consonant HAVE to be nasalised? Like the word 'things', 'into', 'lonely', 'bringing' etc.?
Are there exceptions or is every vowel before 'n,m' nasalised?
great, i hope more videos in depth about Nasalized vowels in American English.
Because of you, i did it guyysss. Thank uuuuuu
THANK U SIR💘
You are saving me alot ✨🤗
Thank you sir for this course.
I want to ask you about the nasalisation of the vowel i in the prefix in- we should write it with a ~ or not? Thank you in advance.
Yes, you need to put the nasalization tilde (~) in the narrow transcription.
Always perfect
When a nasal sound can affect: /ə/ (“the schwa”)???
Merci !!!!!!!
How about nasalization in diphthongs? thank you!
Diphthongs are similar to monophthongs in this sense.
If you think about it, really few Americans will pronounce the "a" as in "hand", "band", "hang", "can", "ham" with the "a" as in "bag", it's gonna be more of an "e" as in "bed" (exception for hang, bang, language pairs) plus a short schwa sound, which makes it a diphthong actually. In this sense in "hand" you have a "nasalized diphthong" already and in words like "bang", "danger", "language" you're likely to hear the "true a" as in "make" also nasalized.
In my personal opinion, a narrow transcription for some of those words would be something like: bang [bẽĩ̯ŋ]; ham [hɛ̃ə̯̃m]; band [bɛ̃ə̯̃nd] and so on. I hope this helps!
Thank you 🌼
@@tonielabutap6723 no probs
@@ivomoreira42 Thanks for the feedback! 👍
What if the vowel is after a nasal consonant like : now
or between two nasal consonants like : men
is it nasalized ? Thanks in advance
Sir kindly explain how to put stree on sylbles and how to divide sylbles onset ,nucleus and coda and let me know the trick to ise schwa bkz me from pakistan n defently my MT is not English so i stuck mostly in above two qestions which i have asked.
If you wonder how you can type in the IPA, you need to install some additional software, such as InKey, on your computer, which will give you an entire phonetic keyboard.
The other discussions will have to be made, hopefully, in separate videos in the future.
See you around!
hi teacher where can i find the phonetic chart that you use please
Search it up online.
To the best of my knowledge, nasals are continuants, not stops
There is 'continuant' and 'noncontinuant'.
Are there non-continuant nasals?
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Try to neglect the nusic
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Music
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