Small clip from new phonetics lesson on the nasalized vowel. If you've ever said こんやく as こんにゃく this one's for you! More info at http://patreon.com/dogen pic.twitter.com/Cmpb29g1ID
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Replying to @Dogen
Just want to leave a note that this is applied only for words that after the ん stands another vowel (in the examples given: げん[い]ん、こん[や]く、せん[え]ん. and you must avoid liaisons while pronouncing. I must say this is very tactful. Thank you.
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Replying to @tranquangthanh_
Yes, Vowels, fricatives, and approximates to be precise. Incidentally I outline this with native speech examples in the lesson ^^
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Replying to @Dogen
To my ears, it sounds like changing the ん pronunciation to /ŋ/ in these kinds of situation.
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Could be for certain speakers. However the linguistic resources I use generally agree that in standard Japanese it’s some sort of nasalized vowel. Cheers!
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