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ZeRinku wrote:I know I am thinking too much about this but I have a few more questions that I just want to ask to be sure. When you shorten the sounds this come between words like haku hito for example does it then fall under the rule that you must say it to sound natural? So would it be hak(u) hito?
ZeRinku wrote:When you say the end of a utterance or phrase do you mean at the end of a complete sentence? So for example you can't say sush(i)desu. right? But I hear ik(u)ze a lot...also how do this work with compound sentences ect.? Like complete, complete end of a sentence? What about the gobi sentences endings like ne, yo, ze ect. do those count? I swear I have heard des(u) ne though. Does the gobi count as actual words(syllables) in this rule?
ZeRinku wrote:And also with the 'i' sound being cut off...especially at the end of a sentence or word...how would that sound? I haven't even heard it in the middle of a word. I don't think I ever heard it before...do you mean only the 'shi' and 'chi' sounds for the 'i' sounds? Or every 'i' sound?
Also does the small 'tsu' sound apply to any of the rules?
ZeRinku wrote:So, you wouldn't say hatch(i)desu. correct? But if I say (I know its not grammatically correct but...) hatachi hito desu. to sound correct in Tokyo dialect I have to say hatch(i)hito desu, right? And the actual right pronunciation of watashi wa is watash(i) wa? But I think I have heard watashi wa before. Is it optional between words(particles)? And futatsu desu would be f(u)tatsu desu. but if I just say futatsu it can be f(u)tats(u), right? The silent 'u' in 'fu' would be...weird. At least I would think...
ZeRinku wrote:Then, hayaku iku would be hayaku ik(u)<-optional 'ku', right? And hayaku sumu would have to be hayak(u) sumu, right?
ZeRinku wrote:And when you say K,S,T,P,H do you mean every sound in that group? Like chi in the 't' group ect?
ZeRinku wrote:Last question, I know this is looking WAY too much into it but...if you are in the middle of a sentence and stop with a word like hatachi but the next word you start a second or two later doesn't have k,s,t,p,h in the first syllable can you still say hatach(i)? Also what about saying something like watashi, gakusei. would you say watash(i) gak(u)sei? The proper way would be watashi gak(u)sei, right? But what if I stopped after watashi to think then said gakusei? Can it be watash(i)...gak(u)sei.?
ZeRinku wrote:In the word 大丈夫 I feel like the i and the j(ou) blend together and make like a kind of buzzing sound. It doesn't sound like the regular jou though. Is this because of the i before it? Is this a rule of some sort? Any other sounds that would do this?
ZeRinku wrote:]OK, next question. I feel like when I say words like さようなら、早く、トヨタ ect. there sounds like there is an invisible i in there, between the with yo(ya, yu ect). Is this just my imagination? Like I feel like I am saying "saiyounara","haiyaku" "toiyota" Or is it just that the beginning of the y sound in ya, yu, and yo sounds like a quick i? Maybe it isn't there? Maybe this the reason why the i in 太陽 is stressed? Is the i even stressed there? This stuff just bothering me.