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Toshi
プロの講師#ng #ŋ #ŋg
There are two pronunciations for ‘ng’.
[ŋ]
hanger, singer
You don’t explode ‘n’ like Japanese nasalized ‘nga’.
[ŋg]
anger, hunger
You explode ‘g’ after ‘n’.
There are no rules or patterns as ‘anger’ and ‘hanger’ are different from each other.
Languages are arbitrary.
If there are some reasons, ‘hanger’ and ‘singer’ are attached ‘-er’ later.
‘anger’ is from old norse ‘angr’.
‘hunger’ is from old English ‘hungor’.
I found that they originally had ‘r’ in their words.
I have asked a native English speaker whether you distinguish them, or pronounce ‘g’ or not.
He pronounced them again and again himself and answered he couldn’t recognize differences between them.
That's just how native speakers are.
Japanese people also would not realize ‘su’ in ‘desu’, ‘masu’ become voiceless like ‘des’ , ‘mas’.
Though it is just ‘voiceless’, not ‘omission’.
Only few Japanese know about this except for some Japanese teachers.
Other examples, ‘ki’ and ‘ku’ in ‘kikuchi’ , which is a very popular Japanese name, become ‘voiceless’.
If you pronounce these ‘ki’ and ‘ku’ as ‘voiced sounds’, it sounds clumsy and like the pronunciation of foreigners.
But they often use ‘voiced sounds’ not ‘voiceless sounds’ in the west area of Japan.
2025年12月18日 05:42
Toshi
語学スキル
英語, ドイツ語, 日本語, ラテン語, モンゴル語, ポルトガル語, スペイン語
言語学習
英語, ドイツ語, 日本語, ラテン語, モンゴル語, ポルトガル語, スペイン語
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