Nantai: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 80: Line 80:
|}
|}
====Dipthongs====
====Dipthongs====
In Japanese, an /ou/ is monophthongised to form a long /oː/. This rule does not occur in Nantai, so おう(''ou'') is actually pronounced /ou/, not //.
In Japanese, /ou/ monophthongises to form a long /oː/. This rule does not occur in Nantai, so おう(''ou'') is actually pronounced [oʊ̯], not //. In the now extinct Eastern Tochigi dialect, /ou/ was pronounced [joː], trading dipthongisation for initial palatalisation.
 
====Nasalisation====
====Nasalisation====
When an alveolar nasal consonant(/n/) is after a vowel, the vowel is nasalised and the consonant is no longer pronounced, e.g. /a/ + /n/ → /an/ → /ã/.
When an alveolar nasal consonant(/n/) is after a vowel, the vowel is nasalised and the consonant is no longer pronounced, e.g. /a/ + /n/ → /an/ → /ã/.
2,983

edits

Navigation menu