57d3541e64bf62601a109bcf6bcdf28dde271685
Japanese/Pitch Accent/Pitch accent usage overview.md
| ... | ... | @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ A mora is the shortest unit of length in Japanese phonology. Every open syllable |
| 8 | 8 | - がっしょう - 4 moras: が っ しょ う |
| 9 | 9 | - パーティー - 4 moras: パ ー ティ ー (ィ is not a separate mora as it's only used to explicitly spell ti instead of chi) |
| 10 | 10 | |
| 11 | -Note: a plural of "mora" can be both "moras" and "morae". I will be using the fist version as it's more inline with english plural rules |
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| 11 | +_Note_: a plural of "mora" can be both "moras" and "morae". I will be using the fist version as it's more inline with english plural rules |
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| 12 | 12 | |
| 13 | 13 | ## Phrase |
| 14 | 14 | A phrase is part of a sentence with distinct meanign and gramatical function, which has it's own pitch accent. Contrary to common belief, pitch accent doesn't apply to words but to entire phrases in a sentence. A phrase usually consist of a core meaning word (usu. noun/verb/adjective) and it's prefixes, suffixes, particles, and conjugation endings. |
| ... | ... | @@ -61,4 +61,5 @@ It's a mora which cannot be stressed, even if it otherwise would following the r |
| 61 | 61 | In almost every case, when a weak mora needs to be stressed, the stress moves one mora back: |
| 62 | 62 | - **~{しゃか\いじん}** (社会人) not ~~**~{しゃかい\じん}**~~, because **い** is a weak mora. |
| 63 | 63 | |
| 64 | -# Specific cases |
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| ... | ... | \ No newline at end of file |
| 0 | +# Specific cases |
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| 1 | +## Noun + particles |