خیشومی نرمکامی واکدار
تصویر
شماره IPA 119 محتوا (اعشاری) ŋ
یونیکد (شانزدهتایی) U+014B الفبای آوایی N
کیرشنبام N
خیشومی نرمکامی یک صامت است که در گفتار برخی از زبانهای جهان به کار میرود. نماد این همخوان در الفبای آوانگاری بینالمللی ⟨ŋ⟩ است.[ ۱]
در زبان کردی جنوبی (زبان لکی ، کلهری ، گورانی، فیلی) نیز کاربرد دارد، واکه فوق هنگام چسبیدن "ن " و "گ " صدای نون تو دماغی فوق را دارد که نمونه انگلیسی آن مثل ring یا among تلفظ میشود مانند واژههای کردی مانْگْ، دَنْگْ
نمونه
زبان
واژه
IPA
معنی
توضیحات
آلبانیایی
ngaqë
[ŋɡacə]
'چونکه'
آلیوتی
chaang
[tʃɑːŋ]
'پنج'
عربی
بعضی لهجهها
إنکار
[ʔɪŋˈkʰɑːr]
'نپذیرفتن'
Allophone of /n/ before /k/ ; more commonly realized as [n] .
ارمنی
شرقی
ընկեր
[əŋˈkɛɾ]
'دوست'
Allophone of /n/ before velar consonants
آسامی
ৰং
[rɔŋ]
'رنگ'
بامبارایی
ŋ onI
[ŋoni]
'گیتار'
باشقیری
мең / meñ
[[:مدیا:Ba-мең.ogg|[mɪ̞ŋ] ]] (راهنما ·اطلاعات )
'نه'
باسکی
hanka
[haŋka]
'ران'
بنگالی
রঙ
[rɔŋ]
'رنگ'
بلغاری [ ۴]
тънко
[ˈtɤŋko]
'باریک، نازک'
کاتالانی
sang
[ˈsaŋ(k)]
'خون'
کردی جنوبی
مانگا
[maŋa]
'ماده گاو'
این صامت در تمام گویشهای کردی جنوبی (لکی، گورانی، کلهوری، کرماشانی، کلیایی، فیلی، زنگنهای، خزلی، سنجابی، کرندی، گروسی، ملکشاهی، ...) وجود دارد.
Chinese
Cantonese
昂
[ŋɔːŋ˩]
'raise'
See Cantonese phonology
Eastern Min
疑
[ŋi]
'suspect'
Gan
牙
[ŋa]
'tooth'
Hakka
我
[ŋai]
'I'
Mandarin
北京
[peɪ˨˩tɕiŋ˥]
'Beijing'
Restricted to the syllable coda. See Mandarin phonology
Northern Min
外
[ŋui]
'outside'
Southern Min
黃
[ŋ̍]
'yellow'
Only in colloquial speech.
Sichuanese
我
[ŋɔ]
'I'
Wu
五
[ŋ˩˧]
'five'
Xiang
熬
[ŋau]
'to boil'
Yuci dialect of Jin
我
[ŋie]
'I'
Chukchi
ӈыроӄ
[ŋəɹoq]
'three'
Czech
tank
[taŋk]
'tank'
See Czech phonology
Dinka
ŋa
[ŋa]
'who'
Danish
sang
[sɑŋˀ]
'song'
See Danish phonology
Dutch
angst
[ɑŋst]
'fear'
See Dutch phonology
English
sing
[[:مدیا:sing-pronunciation-audio.ogg|[sɪŋ] ]]
'sing'
Restricted to the syllable coda. See English phonology
Faroese
on g
[ɔŋk]
'meadow'
Fijian
g one
[ˈŋone]
'child'
Filipino
ngayón
[ŋaˈjon]
'now'
Finnish
kangas
[ˈkɑŋːɑs]
'cloth'
Occurs in native vocabulary only intervocally (as a geminate) and before /k/ . See Finnish phonology
French
camping
[kɑ̃piŋ]
'camping'
Occurs only in words borrowed from English or Chinese. See French phonology
Galician
unh a
[ˈuŋa]
'one' (f.)
German
lang
[laŋ]
'long'
See Standard German phonology
Greek
άγχος /anchos
['aŋxo̞s]
'Stress'
See Modern Greek phonology
Hebrew
Standard
אנגלית
[aŋɡˈlit]
'English language'
Allophone of /n/ before velar stops. See Modern Hebrew phonology
Sephardi
עין
[ŋaˈjin]
'Ayin'
See Sephardi Hebrew
Hiligaynon
buang
[bu'äŋ]
'crazy/mentally unstable'
Hindustani
रंग / رنگ
[rəŋɡ]
'color'
See Hindi–Urdu phonology
Hungarian
ing
[iŋɡ]
'shirt'
Allophone of /n/ . See Hungarian phonology
Icelandic
göng
[ˈkœy̯ŋk]
'tunnel'
See Icelandic phonology
Indonesian
bang un
[bäŋʊn]
'wake up'
Inuktitut
ᐴᙳᐆᖅ /puunng uuq
[puːŋŋuːq]
'dog'
Inuvialuktun
qamng uiyuaq
[qamŋuijuaq]
'snores'
Irish
a nglór
[ˌə̃ ˈŋl̪ˠoːɾˠ]
'their voice'
Occurs word-initially as a result of the consonantal mutation eclipsis. See Irish phonology
Italian
anche
[ˈaŋke]
'also'
Allophone of /n/ before /k/ and /ɡ/ . See Italian phonology
Itelmen
қниң
[qniŋ]
'one'
Japanese
Standard
南極 /nankyoku
[naŋkʲokɯ]
'the South Pole'
See Japanese phonology
Eastern dialects
鍵 /kagi
[kaŋi]
'key'
Kagayanen
manang
[manaŋ]
'older sister'
Kazakh
мың /myń
[məŋ]
'thousand'
Kyrgyz
миң
[miŋ]
'thousand'
Ket
аяң
[ajaŋ]
'to damn'
Khasi
ngap
[ŋap]
'honey'
Korean
방 /bang
[pɐŋ]
'room'
See Korean phonology
Luxembourgish
keng
[kʰæŋ]
'nobody'
See Luxembourgish phonology
Macedonian
aнглиски
[ˈaŋɡliski]
'English'
Occurs occasionally as an allophone of /n/ before /k/ and /ɡ/ . See Macedonian phonology
Luganda
ŋaaŋa
[ŋɑːŋɑ]
'hornbill'
Malay
bangun
[bäŋon]
'wake up'
Malayalam
മാങ്ങ
[maːŋŋɐ]
'mango'
Māori
ngā
[ŋaː]
'the'
Marathi
रंग
[rəŋə]
'colour'
See Marathi phonology
Mari
еҥ
[jeŋ]
'human'
Nganasan
ӈаӈ
[ŋaŋ]
'mouth'
Nivkh
ңамг
[ŋamɡ]
'seven'
North Frisian
Mooring
kåchelng
[ˈkɔxəlŋ]
'stove'
Norwegian
gang
[ɡɑŋ]
'hallway'
See Norwegian phonology
Punjabi
ਵੰਙ
[vəŋ]
'bangle'
Persian
رنگ
[ræːŋ]
'color'
See Persian phonology
Pipil
nemanh a
[nemaŋa]
'later'
Polish
bank
[bäŋk]
'bank'
Allophone of /n/ before /k, ɡ, x/ ; post-palatal before /kʲ, ɡʲ/ .[ ۱۴] [ ۱۵] See Polish phonology
Portuguese
manga
[ˈmɐ̃(ŋ)ɡɐ]
'mango'
Occurs occasionally in slow, careful speech, as an allophone of /n/ before /ɡ/ and /k/ , when the speaker does not delete the /n/ by fusing it with the preceding vowel.
Occitan
Provençal
vin
[viŋ]
'wine'
Rapanui
hanga
[haŋa]
'bay'
Sometimes written ⟨ g⟩ in Rapanui
Romanian
Țara Moților Transylvanian
câine
[kɨŋi] [stress? ]
'dog'
Corresponds to [n] in standard Romanian. See Romanian phonology
Serbo-Croatian[ ۱۷]
stanka
[stâːŋka]
'pause'
Allophone of /n/ before /k, ɡ/ .[ ۱۷] See Serbo-Croatian phonology
Seri
comcáac
[koŋˈkaak]
'Seri people'
Shona
nanga
[ŋaŋɡa]
'witch doctor'
Slovene
tan k
[taŋk]
'tank'
Spanish
All dialects
domingo
[d̪o̞ˈmĩŋɡo̞]
'Sunday'
Allophone of /n/ before velar stops. See Spanish phonology
Galician Spanish, Andalusian, Canarian, and most Latin American dialects
alquitrán
[alkitˈɾaŋ ]
'tar'
Allophone of /n/ in word-final position, either before consonants other than velar stops or vowel-beginning words or before a pause.
Swahili
ng' ombe
[ŋombɛ]
'cow'
Swedish
ingenting
[ɪŋɛnˈtʰɪŋ]
'nothing'
See Swedish phonology
Tamil
இங்கே
[iŋgeː]
'here'
Thai
งาน
[ŋaːn]
'work'
Tuamotuan
rangi/ragi
[raŋi]
'sky'
Tundra Nenets
ӈэва
[ŋæewa]
'head'
Turkish
Ankara
[ˈaŋkaɾa]
'Ankara'
Allophone of /n/ before /k/ and /ɡ/ . See Turkish phonology
Turkmen
müň
[myŋ]
'thousand'
Uzbek
ming
[miŋ]
'thousand'
Venetian
man
[maŋ]
'hand'
Vietnamese
ngà
[ŋaː˨˩]
'ivory'
See Vietnamese phonology
Welsh
rhwng
[r̥ʊŋ]
'between'
West Frisian
kening
[ˈkeːnɪŋ]
'king'
Yi
ꉢ /nga
[ŋa˧]
'I'
Yup'ik
ung ung ssiq
[uŋuŋssiq]
'animal'
Zapotec
Tilquiapan
yan
[jaŋ]
'neck'
Word-final allophone of lenis /n/
منابع
↑ Velar nasal. (2016, February 12). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 12:11, February 21, 2016, from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Velar_nasal&oldid=704566293
↑ Sabev, Mitko. "Bulgarian Sound System" . Retrieved 31 July 2013 .
↑ Gussmann (1974) , pp. 107, 111 and 114.
↑ Ostaszewska & Tambor (2000) , pp. 35, 41 and 86.
↑ ۱۷٫۰ ۱۷٫۱ Landau et al. (1999 :67)
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