Pitulung:IPA/Basa Jepang
Praèn
The charts below show the way in which the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) represents Japanese language and Okinawan pronunciations in Wikipedia articles. Sounds occurring only as allophones are included for narrow transcription.
See Japanese phonology for a more thorough discussion of the sounds of Japanese.
Examples in the charts are Japanese words transliterated according to the Hepburn romanization system.
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Notes
[besut | besut sumber]- ↑ a b c d In dialects including the Tokyo dialect, the voiced fricatives [z, ʑ] are generally pronounced as affricates [dz, dʑ] in word-initial positions and after the moraic nasal /N/ (pronounced [n] before [dz] and [ɲ] before [dʑ]) or the sokuon /Q/ (spelled ッ, only found in loans). However, actual realization of these sounds varies greatly depending on region and speaker (see Yotsugana).
- ↑ a b c d When an affricate consonant is gemintated, only the closure component of it is repeated: [kiddzɯ], [eddʑi], [ittsɯi], [kettɕakɯ].
- ↑ a b c When placed between vowels, Cithakan:IPAslink is sometimes pronounced [ŋ] or [ɣ] by older speakers.
- ↑ [ɰ], romanized w, is the consonant equivalent of the vowel [ɯ], which is pronounced with varying degrees of rounding depending on dialect.
- ↑ The moraic nasal /N/ is pronounced as some kind of nasalized vowel before a vowel, semivowel or fricative. [ɰ̃] is a conventional notation undefined for the exact place of articulation.
- ↑ a b In many dialects including the Tokyo dialect, close vowels [i] and [ɯ] become voiceless (marked by a ring under the symbol) when unaccented and surrounded by voiceless consonants.
- ↑ a b [ɯ], romanized u, exhibits varying degrees of rounding depending on dialect. In the Tokyo dialect, it is either unrounded or compressed ([ɯᵝ]), meaning the sides of the lips are held together without horizontal protrusion, rather than protruded [u].
- ↑ The position of this downstep, which does not occur in all words, varies between dialects and is usually not indicated. The downstep is a drop in pitch, and the word rises in pitch before the ꜜ. When ꜜ occurs after the final syllable of a word, any attached grammatical particles have a low tone.