Nasal Consonant

Definition:

A nasal consonant is produced by lowering the velum (soft palate) so that air flows through the nasal cavity while the oral tract is completely blocked at some place of articulation. Nasals share the oral closure of plosives but differ critically in that airflow is redirected nasally rather than stopped entirely. In English, the three nasal consonants are: /m/ (bilabial: man), /n/ (alveolar: now), and /?/ (velar: sing). Nasals are universally present across world languages and are classified as sonorantsvoiced, resonant sounds with rich harmonic structure.


Articulation of Nasal Consonants

Nasal production involves three simultaneous requirements:

  1. Oral closure: A complete stop at a place of articulation (lips for /m/, tongue tip for /n/, tongue body for /?/)
  2. Velic opening: The velum is lowered, opening the velopharyngeal port to allow nasal airflow
  3. Voicing: Vocal folds vibrate (nasals are always (or nearly always) voiced in natural speech)

English Nasals

NasalPlaceExample
/m/bilabialman, come, him
/n/alveolarnow, sun, bean
/?/velarsing, ring, bank

Nasal Assimilation

Nasals undergo assimilation to the place of articulation of adjacent consonants:

  • ten /tɛn/ → ten bikes /tɛm baɪks/ (/n/ → /m/ before bilabial)
  • ten /tɛn/ → ten games /tɛŋ geɪmz/ (/n/ → /ŋ/ before velar)

This is a highly systematic process and another reason why connected speech in context differs significantly from citation forms.

Nasals in Syllable Structure

Nasals can occur in all positions in English syllable structure:

  • Onset: /m/ in man, /n/ in net
  • Coda: /m/ in him, /n/ in sun, /?/ in ring
  • Syllabic nasals: Function as syllable nucleus without a vowel: button [b?tn?], rhythm [r?ðm?]

Cross-Linguistic Nasals

Nasals are typologically near-universal:

  • Nearly all languages have /m/ and /n/
  • Many languages have /?/ but only in coda position (English restricts /?/ similarly)
  • Some languages have palatal nasals /?/ (Spanish ñ, Italian/French gn)
  • Nasal vowels in French, Portuguese, Polish are produced by nasalizing the vowel itself (velum open during vowel production)

Oral-Nasal Contrast in L2

L2 learners from languages with richer nasal systems (nasalized vowels, multiple nasal places) or fewer nasals may have difficulties:

  • Mandarin and Cantonese learners may confuse /n/ and /l/ in L2 English or vice versa
  • French and Portuguese learners transfer nasal vowels where English expects oral vowels + nasal consonant
  • Japanese has a moraic nasal /N/ that is realized differently by context, creating transfer issues

History

Nasal consonants were recognized in ancient Indian phonological analysis, where they were called anunasika. European descriptive phonetics from the 18th century onward analyzed nasals as a distinct class defined by velopharyngeal opening. Modern acoustic phonetics clarified that nasal murmur (the characteristic low-frequency resonance) is produced by nasal cavity resonance coupled to oral anti-resonance.

Common Misconceptions

  • “/?/ is two sounds” — In English, /?/ is a single phoneme, not /n/ + /g/. The letter sequence ng maps to a single velar nasal
  • “Nasals are not stops” — Technically, nasals are nasal stops — they do involve a complete oral closure, categories are not mutually exclusive

Criticisms

  • The boundary between oral and nasal in running speech is not binary; speakers vary in the degree of velum opening, and nasal coarticulation (nasalization spreading to adjacent vowels) is gradient

Social Media Sentiment

Nasal consonants come up frequently in discussions of English pronunciation (especially /? vs /ng/ spellings), French nasal vowels, and Mandarin /n/ vs /l/ confusions. Last updated: 2026-04*

Practical Application

  • Teach /?/ explicitly as a single sound at the back of the mouth, not a sequence — provide minimal pairs (win/wing, ran/rang)
  • For learners confused about nasal assimilation: contextualize it as natural connected speech behavior, not an error

Related Terms

See Also

Research

  • Ladefoged, P., & Maddieson, I. (1996). The Sounds of the World’s Languages. Blackwell. — Cross-linguistic survey including nasal consonant typology.
  • Recasens, D. (1983). Place cues for nasal consonants with special reference to Catalan. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 73(4), 1346–1353. — Detailed study of nasal place cues and nasal assimilation.
  • Maddieson, I. (1984). Patterns of Sounds. Cambridge University Press. — Typological survey confirming near-universal presence of nasal consonants.