Roth, Ruth2016-06-102016-06-101975-01Roth, R. (1975). The relevance of morpheme boundaries to nasal assimilation in Canadian English. Calgary Working Papers in Linguistics, 1(Winter), 37-38.2371-2643http://hdl.handle.net/1880/51253Consider the words sink, blunt, frank, single, uncle and wind; all of which contain the phoneme /n/. Note that lint, blunt and wind differ from the others in the pronunciation of /n/. Sink, frank, single, and uncle all contain an /n/ folowed by a voiceless /k/ and herein lies the difference. It appears that when an /n/ and a /k/ appear together, nasal assimilation occurs, changing the alveolar nasal /n/ to the velar nasal /ŋ/.enEnglish language--CanadaLinguisticsDialectologyGrammar, Comparative and general--MorphologyEnglish language--MorphologyThe relevance of morpheme boundaries to nasal assimilation in Canadian Englishjournal article10.11575/PRISM/28867