English Language & Usage Asked on April 23, 2021
In (GA, SSBE) English, the phoneme /ŋ/ (in ring) seems to have so many restrictions:
Another phoneme that has many restrictions is /ʒ/ but I assume it can be attributed to the fact that /ʒ/ is not a native phoneme and I am not interested in that phoneme. (There is also /h/ with many restrictions, but I am not interested in that either.)
Is there any reason why /ŋ/ has so many restrictions?
Most of the unusual behavior of [ŋ] can be explained in its historical origin from simplification of the consonant cluster [ŋg] (in words where [ŋ] occurs in modern English outside of the clusters [ŋg] and [ŋk]).
Compare the behavior of the consonant cluster [mp]: like [ŋ], [mp] cannot occur at the start of a syllable and rarely occurs after a diphthong or "tense" vowel.
The clusters [nd] and [nt] can be found after diphthongs more frequently than [mp] or [ŋ], but that is part of a general pattern where syllables ending in coronal consonants such as [d], [t], [s], [z] are allowed to have more complicated structure than syllables ending in non-coronal consonants.
Correct answer by herisson on April 23, 2021
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