The third one? The one the article says is [mawɁƏn̩] instead of [mawɁƏn]? Either bad formatting by the abstract or it's the same IPA pronunciation. The article has a slightly different looking n that I can't identify in IPA.
Either way, what you posted absolutely disputes post 5368 about alveolar stops vs. glottal stops and is AT BEST a regional quirk and absolutely nothing to do with laziness. In fact, it's an extra step to go from glottal stop to voiced vowel to alveolar nasal.
Did you go to the link and look at the pdf which is available for free download? Obviously the pdf is better formatted than what I copied and pasted into the jazzfanz text box. Anyway, I'm not an expert so I don't know the difference between glottal vs alveolar stops. It definitely is a regional quirk. Didn't claim it was due to laziness (that was @LogGrad98). But it's a 14 page peer-reviewed journal article which says what happens in Utah is not the same as what happens elsewhere, disproving your pet peeve. So maybe read it (if you haven't yet).
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