The labiodental nasal is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ɱ, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is F. The IPA symbol is a lowercase letter m with a leftward hook protruding the from the lower right of the letter.
The labiodental nasal is pronounced very similarly to the bilabial nasal [m], except instead of the lips touching each other, the lower lip touches the upper teeth, or sometimes vice-versa. The position of the lips and teeth is the same as for the production of the other labiodental consonants, like [f] and [v].
Features
Features of the labiodental nasal:
The labiodental nasal is fairly uncommon in English, and where it occurs it is an allophone of m. It is the sound that pronounced when an m is followed by f or v, as in comfort or circumvent.
In other languages
In colloquial German speech, the labiodental nasal is an allophone of n in words where "n" is followed by "f", such as fūnf [fʏɱf]. While this is not considered "Standard German", it is a very common pronunciation.
See also