![]() |
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: |
I'm going to separate it for you:
Kawaii- (adj.) cute, adorable pronunciation: (keh-y-ee) **Hope this helps** |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
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. |
Quote:
Quote:
MMM's explanation is right. |
KA-WA-I~.
will be ok |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Make sure you guys don't say "kowaii" which sounds like "kowai." It means scary.
|
Quote:
|
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. |
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".
|
Quote:
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". |
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. |
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...
|
Yeah, you've got a point. Only problem is, I don't know any Japanese people/teachers.........
|
Quote:
|
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 |
All times are GMT. The time now is 03:54 PM. |