Dictionary:
na·sal·ize (nā'zə-līz') ![]() |
| WordNet: nasalize |
The verb has 2 meanings:
Meaning #1:
speak nasally or through the noze
Synonym: nasalise
Meaning #2:
pronounce with a lowered velum
Synonym: nasalise
| Wikipedia: Nasalization |
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| Sound change and alternation |
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General
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Lenition (weakening)
Consonant gradation
Sonorization (voicing) Spirantization (assibilation) Rhotacism (change of [z] or [d] to [r]) L-vocalization (change of [l] to [w]) Debuccalization (loss of place) |
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Elision (loss)
Apheresis (initial)
Syncope (medial) Apocope (final) Haplology (similar syllables) Fusion Cluster reduction Compensatory lengthening |
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Epenthesis (addition)
Anaptyxis (vowel)
Excrescence (consonant) Prosthesis (initial) Paragoge (final) Unpacking Vowel breaking (diphthongization) |
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Coalescence
Coarticulation Palatalization (before front vowels) Velarization (before back vowels) Labialization (before rounded vowels) Initial voicing (before a vowel) Final devoicing (before silence) Metaphony (vowel harmony, umlaut) Consonant harmony |
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Cheshirisation (trace remains)
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Sandhi (boundary change)
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In phonetics, nasalization is the production of a sound while the velum is lowered, so that some air escapes through the nose during the production of the sound by the mouth. An archetypal nasal sound is [n].
In the International Phonetic Alphabet nasalization is indicated by printing a tilde above the symbol for the sound to be nasalized: [ã] is the nasalized equivalent of [a], and [ṽ] is the nasalized equivalent of [v]. An older IPA subscript diacritic [ą], called an ogonek, is still seen, especially when the vowel bears tone marks that would interfere with the superscript tilde. For example, [ą̄ ą́ ą̀ ą̂ ą̌] are more legible in most fonts than [ã̄ ã́ ã̀ ã̂ ã̌].
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Nasal vowels are found in many languages, and in a large subset, such as French, Portuguese, Breton, Polish, as well as in several other language families outside Europe, they contrast with oral vowels. Many languages, however, only have oral vowels.
There are occasional cases where vowels show contrasting degrees of nasality[citation needed].
By far the most common nasalized sounds are nasal stops such as [m], [n] or [ŋ]. They may be called stops because airflow through the mouth is blocked, though air flows freely through the nose. Their non-nasal articulatory counterparts are the oral stops. In theory, these nasal consonants could therefore perfectly be represented as, respectively, [b̃], [d̃] or [ɡ̃]. The reason why these nasal consonants have their own symbol is their frequency in the world's languages.
Nasalized versions of other consonant sounds also exist, though they are much rarer than either nasal stops or nasal vowels. Some of the South Arabic languages have phonemic nasalized fricatives, such as [z̃], which sounds something like a simultaneous [n] and [z]. The sound written r in Mandarin has an odd history; for example, it has been borrowed into Japanese as both [z] and [n]. It seems likely that it was once a nasalized fricative, perhaps a palatal [ʝ̃]. In the Hupa velar nasal /ŋ/, the tongue often does not make full contact, resulting in a nasalized approximant, [ɰ̃]. This is cognate with a nasalized [ȷ̃] in other Athabaskan languages. In Umbundu, phonemic /ṽ/ contrasts with (allophonically) nasalized [w̃], and so is likely to be a true fricative rather than an approximant. In Old and Middle Irish the lenited m was a nasalized bilabial fricative.[1]
Besides nasalized oral fricatives, there are true nasal fricatives, called nareal fricatives, sometimes produced by people with speech defects. That is, the turbulence in the airflow characteristic of fricatives is produced not in the mouth but in the nasal passages. A tilde plus trema diacritic is used for this in the Extensions to the IPA: [n͋] is an alveolar nareal fricative, with no airflow out of the mouth, while [v͋] is an oral fricative (a [v]) with simultaneous nareal frication. No known natural language makes use of nareal consonants.
Nasalization may be lost over time. There are also denasal sounds, which sound like nasals spoken with a head cold, but these are not used in non-pathological speech.
[dubious ]
Nasal stops frequently nasalize surrounding vowels[citation needed]. Not infrequently, this can result in the addition of nasal vowels to a language[citation needed]. This happened in French, where most final consonants disappeared, but where in the case of final nasals, the preceding vowels became nasal, introducing a new distinction into the language. An example is vin blanc [vɛ̃ blɑ̃] "white wine", ultimately from Latin vinum and blancum.
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| Misspellings: nasalization |
Common misspelling(s) of nasalization
| Translations: Nasalize |
Dansk (Danish)
v. tr., -
v. intr. - nasalere
Nederlands (Dutch)
nasaleren (door de neus (uit)spreken)
Français (French)
v. tr. - nasaliser
v. intr. - nasaliser
Deutsch (German)
v. - näseln, nasalieren (als Nasallaut aussprechen)
Ελληνική (Greek)
v. - ερρινοποιώ
Italiano (Italian)
nasalizzare
Português (Portuguese)
v. - nasalar
Русский (Russian)
произносить в нос
Español (Spanish)
v. tr. - nasalizar, hablar con voz nasal
v. intr. - nasalizar, hablar con voz nasal
Svenska (Swedish)
v. - tala nasalt, tala i näsan
中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
使鼻音化, 用鼻音发声
中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
v. tr. - 使鼻音化
v. intr. - 用鼻音發聲
한국어 (Korean)
v. tr. - ~을 비음화하다
v. intr. - 비음화하여[콧소리로]발음하다
日本語 (Japanese)
v. - 鼻にかけて発音する, 鼻音化する
العربيه (Arabic)
(فعل) يلفظ او يتكلم من الانف
עברית (Hebrew)
v. tr. - אנפף
v. intr. - אנפף
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| nasalize | |
| Thinkin' Problem (song) | |
| Nasal consonant |
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