Features of the dental nasal:
However, there are languages with true apical (or less commonly laminal) dental n. It is found in Dravidian languages such as Tamil and Malayalam, and in the South-American Mapudungun. For example, in the Malayalam pronunciation of "Nārāyanan", the first "n" is dental (the second is retroflex and the third alveolar).
| Language | Word | IPA | Meaning | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arabic | Standard | قرن | [qɑrn̪] | 'century' | See Arabic phonology |
| Dinka | nhiar | 'love' | |||
| Finnish | kanto | 'tree stump' | See Finnish phonology | ||
| French | connexion | 'connection' | See French phonology | ||
| Greek | άνθρωπος | 'human being' | See Modern Greek phonology | ||
| Polish | noga | 'leg' | See Polish phonology | ||
| Portuguese | nariz | 'nose' | See Portuguese phonology | ||
| Russian | ханжой | 'hypocrite' (instr.) | Contrasts with palatalized alveolar nasal. See Russian phonology | ||
| Spanish | antes | [ˈãn̪t̪e̞s] | 'before' | See Spanish phonology | |