Postby tomhogers » May 12th, 2006 3:31 pm
Hi all,
You have to remember that Japanese is a syllibaric language, i.e. words in Japanese are formed by syllables, not by individual letters (whether vowels or consonants). The only quasi consonant used is n.
Geminate consonants (doubled consonants) are marked by doubling the consonant of the syllable following the sokuon, っ.
So, no Japanese word ends with a consonant. They can only end with a syllable, syllable + vowel, or n.
Cheers,
Tom
Last edited by tomhogers on May 12th, 2006 5:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Just another
和漢 WAKAN
若人 WHACKO DOing his thing