İngilizce Öğretmeni Bul
highongasoline
Whats the difference between T as in ㅌ and T as in ㄷ(d,t) and how to use this T as in ㅌ?
8 Tem 2012 13:49
Yanıtlar · 2
2
It's a question about a voiced and an unvoiced sound. ㄷ is closer to t sound than d, when it is at the beginning of a word. At the same situation,ㄱ is more closer to k and ㅂto p. So most of Korean has difficulty to discern a voiced sound in English. And Korean learners meet same trouble too when they listen ㄱ/ㅋ,ㄷ/ㅌ,ㅂ,ㅍand ㅈ,ㅊ. Hve you ever seen the English name of 부산? It had been PUSAN. But Now is BUSAN.
I give you some explains:
An initial consonant is any consonant at the beginning of a word. Initial consonants (especially at the beginning of sentences and phrases) are usually pronounced voiceless. For example the ㅈ in the word 저 ("I") is typically voiceless, especially as first word of a sentence. That makes it sound more like "ch" than "j" to an English speaker. The consonants that follow this rule are ㄱ, ㄷ, ㅈ, and ㅂ. Thus, initial ㄱ sounds more like "k" than "g", initial ㄷ sounds more like "t" than "d", initial ㅈ sounds more like "ch" than "j", and initial ㅂ sounds more like "p" than "b":
Examples:
가 ([ka]): initial sound is unvoiced.
다 ([ta]): initial sound is unvoiced.
바 ([pa]): initial sound is unvoiced.
자 ([ʨa], "cha"): initial sound is unvoiced.
[edit] Middle ConsonantsConsonants that come in the middle of a sentence can follow some complex sound changes, but the two most important changes are whether the consonant follows another consonant or a vowel. For example, the word 막대기 ("stick") has a middle consonant-consonant sequence (ㄱㄷ) and a vowel-consonant sequence (ㅐㄱ). In many cases, a middle consonant with a preceding consonant becomes slightly more tensified, meaning a "tighter, stronger" pronunciation. So the ㄷ becomes a slightly harder "d" ([d̬]), but the second ㄱ is pronounced "normally" ([g]). The same consonants listed in the section above (ㄱ, ㄷ, ㅈ, and ㅂ) are also mainly the ones that follow this rule.
Examples:
막대기 ([mak̚d̬ɛːgi]): Middle consonant ㄷ follows another consonant, so it is more tense.
막대기 ([mak̚d̬ɛːgi]): Middle consonant ㄱ follows another vowel, so it has the standard pronunciation.
* a source from: http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Korean/Essential_Pronunciation_Rules
9 Temmuz 2012
....
9 Temmuz 2012
Hâlâ cevap bulamadın mı?
Sorularını yaz ve ana dil konuşanlar sana yardım etsin!
highongasoline
Dil Becerileri
İngilizce, Fransızca, Almanca, Korece, İspanyolca
Öğrenim Dili
Fransızca, Korece, İspanyolca
Beğenebileceğin Makaleler

The Power of Storytelling in Business Communication
40 beğeni · 9 Yorumlar

Back-to-School English: 15 Must-Know Phrases for the Classroom
28 beğeni · 6 Yorumlar

Ten Tourist towns in Portugal that nobody remembers
56 beğeni · 22 Yorumlar
Daha fazla makale