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Reineh
For Japanese native speakers: can you divide 3 words into little parts? This question is for Japanese native speakers only. I just want to check how you see it. Just curious. Please don't look at other members' answers! Can you please name the smallest parts of the words "matsuri" (holiday), "hashi" (chopsticks) and "hako" (box). What parts do these words consist of? Romaji, please.
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الإجابات · 4
1
If I'm understanding your question right, you are wanting to know the pronunciation of these words? Matsuri: ma-tsu-ri Hashi: ha-shi Hako: ha-ko Here's a good website with a Japanese hiragana pronunciation chart: http://mylanguages.org/japanese_alphabet.php Hope this helps!
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Hi, Ryan! Thank you, but I think I know enough about Japanese sillabics. I study Japanese for about 4 or 5 years. This question is kind of an experiment, I want to know how Japanese think about these words, how do they divide them mentally. I'd like to receive native speakers' answers.
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Hello, I am not a native speaker (or even a speaker) of Japanese, but I enjoy learning about writing scripts in general so I have put some study into this (I am a conlanger actually) Japanese is a syllabry rather than an alphabet. What that means is that every Japanese "letter" in Hiragana or Katakana is actually a consonant AND a vowel sound. The equivalent is us writing "the" as one letter, rather than 3. So from my understanding (and please remember that I could be wrong, though I doubt it) is that Matsuri = Ma + Tsu + Ri Hashi = Ha + Shi Hako = Ha + ko
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