Eldridge OnLine Japanese Lessons

 


Japanese Lesson #1Japanese Lesson #2Japanese Lesson #3Japanese Lesson #4Japanese Lesson #5Japanese Lesson #6Japanese Lesson #7Japanese Lesson #8Japanese Lesson #9Japanese Lesson #10

ai - "love in Japanese" shirts etc Get a Shirt or Hat in Japanese!   Samurai in Japanese - hats etc

Useful expressions in Japanese
LESSON 1- Pronunciation and the Alphabet
 
First, we'll give you the alphabet and a few notes on how to pronounce Japanese words.

On pronunciation:

Japanese is pronounced in syllables. Each Japanese letter (kana) represents one syllable. At the moment, we will not be including the actual Japanese kana on this page, just practice how to speak first!

There are five vowels: a,i,u,e and o. Each is always pronounced the same way, the way it is spelled! Simple, right!

REMEMBER: Vowels are pronounced the same as in Spanish or Italian;

Short vowels:

 a as in father i as in ink u as in true e as in pen o as in open

 Vowel combinations:

All combined vowels are pronounced in full;

ei= e + i as in day ai= a + i as in alive ou= o + u as in float au= a + u as in out

Important Note: All vowels and consonants must be given full value when spoken. One of few exceptions is "u", which is almost mute, except where it is the initial syllable. An example is desu.

Desu, as in "Dare desu ka?" (Who is it?) is pronounced as des, as in desperate. (without the 'pret'!)

Suteeki (steak) is near to "steiki". Remember ee is e + e not i + i.

One last tip, the "tsu" sounds like that in "pets" (silent "u") and the "r" is pronounced with the top of the tongue; a sound midway between l and r, never rolled.


Add each vowel to the consonants on the left to produce the whole Japanese alphabet, it's that easy! (almost)

  A I U E O
 A
A I U E O
 K
KA KI KU KE KO
 S
SA SHI SU SE SO
 T
TA CHI TSU TE TO
 N
NA NI NU NE NO
 H
HA HI FU HE HO
 M
MA MI MU ME MO
 Y
YA . YU . YO
 R
 RA RI RU RE RO
 W
WA . . . WO
 N
N . . . .

(Where you see nothing, there is no sound.)

Now, you know the syllables and how to pronounce them. It is soon time to put them together and start making words!

That will be your next lesson.....

On to Lesson 2>>

pronuciation drills

site dictionary