Words:

IDLanguageEntryAnnotationLoanSourceSource Gloss
43557Persian (Farsi) (Tehrani Dialect)maMahootian (1997)
46161Pashto (Northern Dialect)muŋDavid (2014)
49481Paraguayan GuaraníoréGregores and Suárez (1967)
49337Panareana Payne (2013)
27200PalauanakiJosephs (1975)
55509PajadeboŋWilson (2007)
33044PaiwantiamenEgli (1990)
54683PáezkweʔsʲJung (2008)
23392PaamesekomaluCrowley (1982)
24777PaakantyiŋaliHercus (1982)
42506OrokoloelavaiilaBrown (1972)
42505OrokoloelalilaBrown (1972)
44673Old HittitewēšHoffner Jr and Melcher (2008)
26231Old Church SlavonicHuntley (1993)
30821OksapminnuxtalxeLoughnane (2009)
30820OksapminnuxutLoughnane (2009)
36000OksapminnuxutLoughnane (2009)
27557OccitannosautresWheeler (1988b)
52510Ocainaxoxo xaka as feminine formRosselli (2000)
25669NyulnyulyaradMcGregor (2011)
28590NyawaygiŋaliliŋuDixon (1983)
61871NumanggangindiHynum (2010)
53652Nukak MakúɸiitBolaños and Epps (2009)
50813Nothern Sothorena Lourwrens el al. (1995)
49193North Marquesanmɑuɑ Cablitz (2006)
43954North Levantine Arabic (Damascene Dialect)nəħnaCowell (1964)
46305Northern Pumi (Northwest Yunnan Dialect)ɑ˩dzɑ̃˥Ding (2014)
53365Northern EmberadaiPardo and Aguirre (1993)
51866Northern EmberatairaMortensen (1999)
58960Noonebee˩wvu˧Hyman (1981)
51293NoonɗiSoukka (2000)
58677Nizaayi˥Kjelsvik (2002)
43605Nigerian PidginwiFaraclas (1996)
47629Nhandaŋajit̪adaBlevins (2001)
22675NgkolmpuniCarroll (2013)
23161NgiyambaaŋaliinaDonaldson (1980)
60121ngiti_ICR_WB(ɨ)maKutsch Lojenga, Constance. (1994)
60683ngiti_ICR_TCC(ɨ̀)màLojenga, Constance Kutsch (1994)
59977Ngiti-ICR-LBɨ̀ma᷅Kutsch Lojenga (1994)
56955NgbandiToronzoni (1989)
46209Ngarinman (Bilinara (Pilinara) Dialect)ŋajiraMeakins and Nordlinger (2014)
28314NgankikurungkurrŋagarriHoddinott and Kofod (1988)
35448NgandiñowoṇiHeath (1978)
22947NgalakanyirkaʔbiraʔMerlan (1983)
46353NeververnamThe form '(ŋ͡gu)mam' is also listed (Barbour 2012:72)Barbour (2012)
61730Neve'eigememruMusgrave (2007)
35928NenyndEvans (2013)
22152NenyndEvans (2013)
26096NemeyəndEvans (2012)
43762NdyukawiIn certain contexts surfaces as ‘w’ by a regular phonological process of vowel deletion (Huttar and Huttar 1994:462). Additionally, in certain contexts surfaces as ‘i’ by a regular phonological process of coalescence (Huttar and Huttar 1994:462). Huttar and Huttar (1994)