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DannysGhostGirl 01-29-2008 12:23 AM

How Do You Pronounce This Word?
 
In Japanese, the word "Kawaii" means cute. How do you pronounce Kawaii?
Is it prononunced like "kwhy?" or does it ryhme with "Hawaii?"
Thank You!!! :vsign:

DivineBled 01-29-2008 01:02 AM

I'm going to separate it for you:

Kawaii- (adj.) cute, adorable

pronunciation: (keh-y-ee)

**Hope this helps**

Retrogamer77 01-29-2008 01:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DivineBled (Post 379405)
I'm going to separate it for you:

Kawaii- (adj.) cute, adorable

pronunciation: (keh-y-ee)

**Hope this helps**

Um...I think Kuh-Wa-yee is more like it. lol.

DivineBled 01-29-2008 03:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Retrogamer77 (Post 379486)
Um...I think Kuh-Wa-yee is more like it. lol.

nope. lol I pronounced it correctly. It also depends on the dialect

Hatredcopter 01-29-2008 04:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DivineBled (Post 379749)
nope. lol I pronounced it correctly. It also depends on the dialect

No, you really didn't.

MMM 01-29-2008 04:06 AM

It is pronounced the same in any dialect...

(With an American accent):

Ka (as in the first syllable of "cotton")

wa (as in the first syllable of "Washington")

ii (as in the first syllable of "east" but extended to twice as long.)

KAWAII has four syllables in Japanese: Ka-Wa-I-I. Each should be spoken for the same length of time.

Nattybumppo 01-29-2008 11:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DivineBled (Post 379405)
I'm going to separate it for you:

Kawaii- (adj.) cute, adorable

pronunciation: (keh-y-ee)

**Hope this helps**

Quote:

Originally Posted by Retrogamer77 (Post 379486)
Um...I think Kuh-Wa-yee is more like it. lol.

In the case the OP is confused at this point: both of the posters I quoted are wrong, and should really go back to studying Japanese pronunciation if they're making mistakes this simple.

MMM's explanation is right.

ikkim 01-29-2008 12:55 PM

KA-WA-I~.
will be ok

Retrogamer77 01-29-2008 01:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nattybumppo (Post 379909)
In the case the OP is confused at this point: both of the posters I quoted are wrong, and should really go back to studying Japanese pronunciation if they're making mistakes this simple.

MMM's explanation is right.

Well, I was assuming the OP wasn't studying Japanese, otherwise they would have known how to pronounce it in the first place. If I had put Ka-Wa-I-I, it might not have come out right on the other end. I have dealt with people who just can't pronounce it the right way with the right phonetic spelling. And it's a lot harder to do over the internet. The real point is, I know how to pronounce the word among other things. Japanese isn't quite the hardest language phonetically. :rolleyes:

MazarDantechildofdevil 01-29-2008 02:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DivineBled (Post 379405)
I'm going to separate it for you:

Kawaii- (adj.) cute, adorable

pronunciation: (keh-y-ee)

**Hope this helps**

In other words... Yes it rhymes with Hawaii... lmao... Dangit... You should've just told him that...

jpdrag0n 01-29-2008 02:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DivineBled (Post 379749)
nope. lol I pronounced it correctly. It also depends on the dialect

depends on the dialect? ive never heard "kawaii" pronounced any other way than just the regular way that MMM pointed out. in okayama and tokyo it was pronounced the same...and these places are very different in terms of dialect...and im japanese so i think i would know.

Harold 01-29-2008 09:53 PM

Make sure you guys don't say "kowaii" which sounds like "kowai." It means scary.

anrakushi 01-30-2008 03:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MMM (Post 379769)
It is pronounced the same in any dialect...

(With an American accent):

Ka (as in the first syllable of "cotton")

wa (as in the first syllable of "Washington")

ii (as in the first syllable of "east" but extended to twice as long.)

KAWAII has four syllables in Japanese: Ka-Wa-I-I. Each should be spoken for the same length of time.

I have to say, the american accent must be profoundly different in pronunciation of the word cotton to an australian accent. the way you have sounded it out using english words sounds much more like 怖い rather than 可愛い. I know you would pronounce it correctly MMM but we pronounce cotton in australian accent like コットン so very different sound. thought that was interesting.

MMM 01-30-2008 03:33 AM

1) I doesn't rhyme with "Hawaii"

2) I understand that "cotton" is pronounced different ways in different parts of the world. That's why I said "American accent". There are many dialects even in American, but the basic, newscaster dialect pronunciation is correct.

Proving that explaining pronunciation over the internet is very difficult.

SSJup81 01-30-2008 03:38 AM

Still odd that you chose cotton, MMM. For someone unfamiliar with Japanese pronunciations, I'd still use "Hawaii" as an example, and point out that you have to extend the "ii" part of it. Seems that'd be a closer similarity than the "co" in cotton for "ka".

MMM 01-30-2008 03:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SSJup81 (Post 381224)
Still odd that you chose cotton, MMM. For someone unfamiliar with Japanese pronunciations, I'd still use "Hawaii" as an example, and point out that you have to extend the "ii" part of it. Seems that'd be a closer similarity than the "co" in cotton for "ka".

The problem with that is that the emphasis in Hawaii is on the "wa" and it is a 3 syllable word in English.

Depending on who you are talking to, there is no stress in the 4-syllable Kawaii or it's on the last two syllables "ii". If you take "Hawaii" and replace the H with a K you will more than likely sound like you are saying "kowai" which, as mentioned before, means quite the opposite of "kawaii".

Amnell 01-30-2008 04:03 AM

Hawai'i actually has a stop between the two i's, so you're all technically wrong :mtongue: . Well, MMM had the best explantion :P .

/ka wa i i/ (IPA, spaces between syllables)

I'll try to approximate the sounds with the standard alphabet, but remember that I speak western American English.

kah-wah-ee-ee

For OP, just remember that vowels are kept pretty short (kinda clipped, really), so don't spend a lot of time on the 'ah' part of those sounds. Also, there should be no real emphasis on any one syllable--that'll come in by itself.

kuronekoaus 01-30-2008 09:39 AM

Lol maybe the user who created this thread should speak to a Japanese teacher/ student in person. You can't really imitate sounds you can't hear...

DannysGhostGirl 01-30-2008 06:58 PM

Yeah, you've got a point. Only problem is, I don't know any Japanese people/teachers.........

SSJup81 01-30-2008 09:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MMM (Post 381230)
The problem with that is that the emphasis in Hawaii is on the "wa" and it is a 3 syllable word in English.

Depending on who you are talking to, there is no stress in the 4-syllable Kawaii or it's on the last two syllables "ii". If you take "Hawaii" and replace the H with a K you will more than likely sound like you are saying "kowai" which, as mentioned before, means quite the opposite of "kawaii".

I was actually just referring to "ha" and "ka", for the most part.

niklo90 01-31-2008 07:50 PM

Its rhymes with Hawaii just put a K infront and say Kawaii
or you can the pronunciation at
Learn Japanese, learn katakana and the o-koto


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