Инсталирайте Steam
вход
|
език
Опростен китайски (简体中文)
Традиционен китайски (繁體中文)
Японски (日本語)
Корейски (한국어)
Тайландски (ไทย)
Чешки (Čeština)
Датски (Dansk)
Немски (Deutsch)
Английски (English)
Испански — Испания (Español — España)
Испански — Латинска Америка (Español — Latinoamérica)
Гръцки (Ελληνικά)
Френски (Français)
Италиански (Italiano)
Индонезийски (Bahasa Indonesia)
Унгарски (Magyar)
Холандски (Nederlands)
Норвежки (Norsk)
Полски (Polski)
Португалски (Português)
Бразилски португалски (Português — Brasil)
Румънски (Română)
Руски (Русский)
Финландски (Suomi)
Шведски (Svenska)
Турски (Türkçe)
Виетнамски (Tiếng Việt)
Украински (Українська)
Докладване на проблем с превода
I've studied Japanese for a long time and even though saying "m" in this word kind of brings you close to the original pronouciation, with heavy emphasis on KIND OF, does not mean that it is right.
the N sound in Japanese is actually not even the exact same as the english N, it's more complicated than that
When you say N in Japanese it's like you are about to say the english N but you never end up hitting the tongue at the roof of your mouth
This is what causes the confusion when people say "M" instead, which again, only brings it close, but does NOT copy the sound of which it represents.
and the main problem is that it's not Japanese at that point. A Japanese guy would hear that you pronounced it wrong, or somebody like me who has been learning for a good while.
The only one you can fool are people who don't understand Japanese.
So YOU tell me, is writing and saying it how it should be said, the right way?