Japanese/Pitch Accent/Pitch accent usage overview.md
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@@ -225,16 +225,17 @@ With the exceptions being:
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Obviously it doesn't apply if the i-adjective is only two moras long:
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-- ~{い\い} or ~{よ\い}
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-- ~{よ\}**~{_く}**
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-- ~{よ\}**~{_くて}**
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-- ~{よ\}**~{_くない}**
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-- ~{よ\}**~{_くなくて}**
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-- ~{よ\}**~{_かった}**
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-- ~{よ\}**~{_くなかった}**
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-- ~{よ\}**~{_さ}**
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-- ~{よ\}**~{_ければ}**
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-- ~{よ}**~{^さそ\う}**
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+- **良い**
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+ - ~{い\い} or ~{よ\い}
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+ - ~{よ\}**~{_く}**
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+ - ~{よ\}**~{_くて}**
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+ - ~{よ\}**~{_くない}**
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+ - ~{よ\}**~{_くなくて}**
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+ - ~{よ\}**~{_かった}**
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+ - ~{よ\}**~{_くなかった}**
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+ - ~{よ\}**~{_さ}**
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+ - ~{よ\}**~{_ければ}**
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+ - ~{よ}**~{^さそ\う}**
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### Heiban i-adjectives
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A small group of i-adjectives have the heiban pitch pattern, but it's becoming more common for them to behave the same way as stressed i-adjectives, especially for younger native Japanese speakers. Heiban adjectives are only heiban when paired with postpositions or a noun directly after. Heiban nouns are still stressed when used at the end of a sentence on their own: