| 1. | All homorganic nasal-obstruent clusters occur in the language.
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| 2. | In English, nasal + stop sequences within a morpheme must be homorganic.
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| 3. | Before plosive or affricate consonants this nasality becomes homorganic nasal of the following consonant.
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| 4. | Adjacent nasals and plosives are usually homorganic.
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| 5. | Homorganic consonants, which have the same place of articulation, may have different manners of articulation.
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| 6. | Consonant sequences include NC ( homorganic nasal & ndash; plosive ), where C may be.
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| 7. | The inserted stop is homorganic with the sonorant, which means it has the same place of articulation.
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| 8. | In many languages, a nasal vowel is followed by a short homorganic nasal consonant before the following consonant.
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| 9. | In orthography, appears as, while the other two appear with a homorganic consonant, and, respectively.
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| 10. | The retroflex voiced stops are pronounced as flaps except word-initially, in gemination, and after homorganic nasals.
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