Newsgroups: sci.lang
Path: cantaloupe.srv.cs.cmu.edu!das-news2.harvard.edu!news2.near.net!news.mathworks.com!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!howland.reston.ans.net!pipex!uunet!EU.net!sun4nl!mcv
From: mcv@inter.NL.net (Miguel Carrasquer)
Subject: Re: H and digraphs thereof
Message-ID: <CxvwI3.II9@inter.NL.net>
Organization: NLnet
References: <37t514$fq7@grivel.une.edu.au) <37uqhc$f2n@gordon.enea.se> <CxurM8.E3w@inter.NL.net> <bmoore-181094115410@bmoore.qualcomm.com>
Date: Tue, 18 Oct 1994 19:51:39 GMT
Lines: 21

In article <bmoore-181094115410@bmoore.qualcomm.com>,
Holoholona <bmoore@qualcomm.com> wrote:
>In article <CxurM8.E3w@inter.NL.net>, mcv@inter.NL.net (Miguel Carrasquer)
>wrote:
>
>
>> I have no references on Galician.  I think that palatal n is written
>> n-tilde, as in Spanish, so that would free up <nh> for the velar
>> nasal.  But does that phoneme exist in Galician?  
>> 
>
>
>i understand that it does in welsh.  how is it spelled?  NH, of course,
>although the voiceless L is spelled LL, not LH.

You must be confusing it with voiceless r, written <rh> in Welsh.

-- 
Miguel Carrasquer         ____________________  ~~~
Amsterdam                [                  ||]~  
mcv@inter.NL.net         ce .sig n'est pas une .cig 
