0 a consonant in which air escapes only through the nose:
In English, "m" and "n" are nasal consonants.
A nasal consonant also provides # a context for the voicing of a following obstruent.
In other words, the oral vowel and the nasal consonant have nothing in common after unpacking has applied.
Rather, attention will be focused on different types of nasal consonant decomposition.
Thus, a common (historical) context for nasal vowels is an adjacent nasal consonant.
However, it is a predictable outcome, if there is indeed a nasal consonant in the underlying representation of nasal vowels.
If a word contains an /m/, will there be another nasal consonant following in the word?
Also, before deletion, the nasal consonant may experience a number of weakening stages.
The alternative adopted in this paper rejects the claim that the nasal consonant is completely deleted.