How to pronounce Japanese five-syllable Hiragana with two dots in the upper right corner?

The two dots in the upper right corner of Hiragana are voiced, and the kana and pronunciation are as follows:

Japanese stops and fricatives can be divided into voiced and unvoiced sounds, and aspirated sounds are not phonemes. Besides, despite the Japanese word "line"? Okay? In fact, some pseudonyms still have voices. The voiceless stops and some stops, including かた, た and ぱ, are aspirated in the capital of the word, but the aspirated in the word is weak, not muddy.

The semi-voiced pa line in Japanese is actually unvoiced. There is a voiced phenomenon in ancient Japanese, that is, if the first word of the second compound word is voiced, it may be voiced (depending on the specific word), especially when it is dialed forward, it usually appears even voiced (the は line may be voiced into a ば line, or it may be "semi-voiced", that is, it becomes a voiced line).

The Chinese words in Japanese, five tones, retain the distinction between clear and turbid in ancient Chinese, completely clear and sub-clear. However, the voiced initials in Chinese are also voiced and confused with voiced and sub-voiced initials, while some nasal initials are stuffed into voiced stops. The Tang pronunciation also retains the full voiced initials to a considerable extent.

Extended data

Japanese pronunciation is classified as follows:

1. voiced sound: when the airflow passes through the glottis, if the area in a certain part of the vocal tract is very small, turbulence will be generated when the airflow passes at high speed, and when the ratio of the airflow speed to the cross-sectional area is greater than a certain critical speed, a fricative sound will be generated, that is, a voiceless sound.

2. Voiced voice: The vocal cords vibrate with voiced voice, which is also called "voiced voice". Voiceless vocal cords are voiceless, also called "voiceless". Practice distinguishing voiced from unvoiced. You can cover your ears and read voiced and unvoiced sounds together.

In Japanese, が, ざ, だ and ば are voiced. Their initials are voiced consonants: g, z, d, b.

There are a lot of voiced sounds in Britain, America, France, Germany, Japan and Russia, such as [b], [d], [g] and [z].

3. Semi-voiced sound: Semi-voiced sound has only one line and five pseudonyms, namely: ぱぴぷぺぽ. "Semi-voiced sound" is a Japanese customary name. Actually, the consonant of this pseudonym is unvoiced p.

4. Ah Q: Ah Q refers to the syllable of ぃ (except ぃ) consisting of pseudonyms (including voiced and semi-voiced) and disyllabic words や, ゆ and よ, with a total of 36 syllables.

Add lowercase "や", "ゆよ" and "よ" in the lower right corner after the pen name of the "ぃ" part. Just add a y between katakana and hiragana.

There is no "moan" in old Japanese. Aoyin appeared because old Japanese needed new sounds to express the pronunciation from China, and most of Aoyin's words were Chinese words.

It should also be noted that the "ぴょぅ" of "military ticket" sounds unvoiced and voiced. For the so-called voiced sound, see the entries "voiced consonant" and "voiced sound" for details.

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