|
Japanese
Pronunciation Guide
When pronouncing Japanese words, remember that each
syllable is stressed equally when saying multi-syllable words (i.e., ka-ra-te,
not kar-ate). All syllables of a word are pronounced with equal emphasis. Also,
a word does not change in the plural as it does in English. For example,
"bonsai" may mean one bonsai or many bonsai. It would be incorrect to say
"bonsais."
Vowels
A = ah, as in
ah |
Y = ee, as in bee |
|
I = ee, as in we |
AI = eye, as in
pie |
U = oo, as in
soon |
EI = ay, as in say |
|
E = eh, as in get |
EN = en, as in ten |
O = oh, as in
old |
YU = u, as in
use |
Consonants
Ba
"bah"
|
Bi
"bee"
|
Bu
"boo"
|
Be
"beh"
|
Bo
"boh"
|
|
|
Chi "chee" |
|
|
|
|
|
Da
"dah"
|
De
"deh"
|
Do
"doh"
|
|
|
|
|
Fu "foo" |
|
|
|
|
|
Ga
"gah"
|
Gi
"gee"
|
Gu
"goo"
|
Ge
"geh"
|
Go
"goh"
|
|
Ha "hah"
|
Hi "hee"
|
He "heh"
|
Ho
"hoh"
|
|
|
Ji
"jee"
|
Ju
"ju"
|
Ja
"jah"
|
|
|
|
Ka
"kah"
|
Ki
"kee"
|
Ku
"koo"
|
Ke
"keh"
|
Ko
"koh"
|
|
Ma
"mah"
|
Mi
"mee"
|
Mu
"moo"
|
Me
"meh"
|
Mo
"moh"
|
|
Na
"nah"
|
Ni
"nee"
|
Nu
"noo"
|
Ne
"neh"
|
No
"noh"
|
|
Pa
"pah"
|
Pi
"pee"
|
Pu
"poo"
|
Pe
"peh"
|
Po
"poh"
|
|
R
"rt"
|
Ra
"rtah"
|
Ri
"rtee"
|
Ru
"rtoo"
|
Re
"rteh"
|
Ro
"rtoh"
|
Sa
"sah"
|
Shi
"shee"
|
Su
"soo"
|
Se
"seh"
|
So "soh"
|
|
Ta
"tah"
|
Tsu
"tsoo"
|
Te
"teh"
|
To
"toh"
|
|
|
Wa "wah"
|
Wo "oh"
|
|
|
|
|
Ya
"yah"
|
Yu
"yoo"
|
Yo
"yoh"
|
|
|
|
Za
"zah"
|
Zu
"zoo"
|
Ze
"zeh"
|
Zo
"zoh"
|
Zu
"zoo"
|
|
top
|
Japanese
Numbers
There
are two counting
systems in Japan
- This is the most
commonly used. Refer
to the Pronunciation
Guide
if needed
ichi (one) |
ni (two) |
san (three) |
shi or yon (four) |
go (five) |
roku (six) |
shichi or nana (seven) |
hachi (eight) |
kuu or kyu (nine) |
juu or jyu (ten) |
Numbers 11-19 are spoken/written
by adding jyu (or juu) plus the one's digit;
juu-ichi (eleven), juu-ni (twelve), juu-san (thirteen), etc.
With numbers 20
and greater, it's the number in the ten's
digit, then "juu", followed by the next number; "Shi"
and "shichi" are not used with
these numbers - "yon" and "nana"
are. nijuu (twenty), sanjuu (thirty),
yonjuu (forty -
do not say shijuu), nanajuu (seventy)
Or if this is easier: Numbers 20-29 are done the same way
with the prefix "ni-jyu" added in front of the one's digit; ni jyu (twenty), ni
jyu ichi (twenty-one), etc.
Numbers 30-39 are done the same way with the
prefix "san-jyu" added in front of the one's digit; san jyu ichi (thirty-one),
and shi jyu ichi (forty-one), kyu jyu kyu (ninety-nine), etc.
There
are always exceptions....
|
hyaku (100) |
sanhyaku (300) |
yonhyaku (400) |
roppyaku (600) |
nanahyaku (700) |
|
happyaku (800) |
sen or issen (1,000) |
sanzen (3,000) |
yonsen (4,000) |
nanasen (7,000) |
|
|
hassen (8,000) |
|
man or ichiman (10,000) |
|
|
top
|