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Study the vowel structure of Japanese language
Posted: Aug 27, 2016
As is typical of moracounting languages, vowel length in Japanese is distinctive, and all five vowels occur in both long and short varieties. Long vowels are written as a vowel plus homorganic glide sequence (VV?), the vowel representing the syllable peak and the homorganic glide the offset e.g. /ki/ 'tree' – /kii?/ 'strange'; /me/ 'eye' – /mee?/ 'niece'; /obasan/ 'aunt' – /obaa?san/ 'grandmother'; /ku/ 'nine' A diphthong is a syllable nucleus with two vowel segments only one of which is syllabic. The non-syllabic may come from an adjoining consonant which is weakened e.g. z> y, b> w; or from an adjoining vowel which loses its syllabicity e.g. i> y, u> w. Diphthongs may also arise from simple vowels but such a development seems not to have occurred in Japanese. In on gliding diphthongs, the non-syllabic precedes the syllabic e.g. [ya, wa]. In off-gliding diphthongs, the non-syllabic follows the syllabic e.g. [ai?, au?]. In moracounting languages such as Japanese, an off-gliding diphthong constitutes a long (i.e. two-mora) syllable. I know all above mentioned details seem a little difficult to understand but once you attend good Japanese language courses in Delhi NCR, all such details will no more be a challenge for you. Kizoku is a premier Japanese language training institute in Delhi NCR region. The teaching techniques and methodology implemented at our institute is technologically quite advanced.