What does “nt” (pronounced “n”) mean in English? (as in ‘nnet’) on wikipedia?

I know that there is a name for pronouncing “nt” as “n” in some words, as is common in American English?

“Internet”

  • is pronounced as “inner net”.
  • “Interesting” means “inner resting”.

What is scientific name for this?

What really makes a person happy?

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2 Answer(s)

The Wikipedia article on intervocalic alveolar flapping addresses this directly:

The cluster can be flapped/tapped; the IPA symbol for a nasal tap is . In quick speech, words like winner and winter can become homophonous. “flip-tapping” does not occur for most speakers in words like carpenter and ninety, which instead surface with “d”.

What is an interactive alveolar flip of clusters?

Answered on December 22, 2021.
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If your hearing is , where /nt/ becomes , then that one is called assimilation, and it is by no means confined to the United States alone. What is a case of progressive assimilation (left to right), in which a later sound becomes more like an earlier one.

Is.t properly expressed as at the end of the syllable coda?

In fact, it is not uncommon to hear “international” pronounced as . This /n/ nasalizes a preceding vowel in regressive assimilation (right-to-left), but is deleted itself.

In a case of reciprocal assimilation, bleed-over goes both ways.

Answered on December 22, 2021.
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