Japanese/Pitch Accent/Pitch accent usage overview.md
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@@ -79,7 +79,9 @@ In almost every case, when a weak mora needs to be stressed, the stress moves on
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### Stressed nouns
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After stressed nouns, most postpositions will follow the low pattern:
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-- ~{せんせ\い} (先生)
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+
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+先生
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+- ~{せんせ\い}
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- ~{せんせ\い}**~{_は}**
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- ~{せんせ\い}**~{_の}**
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- ~{せんせ\い}**~{_に}**
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@@ -89,7 +91,9 @@ After stressed nouns, most postpositions will follow the low pattern:
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- ~{せんせ\い}**~{_ですよね}**
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Keep in mind it also applies to odaka:
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-- ~{はな\} (花)
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+
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+花
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+- ~{はな\}
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- ~{はな\}**~{_は}**
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- ~{はな\}**~{_ですよね}**
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@@ -102,7 +106,8 @@ One very important exception is **日本** when paired with **〜の**:
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### Heiban nouns
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After non-stressed (heiban) nouns, the behaviour is different based on how long the whole postposition is. If it's only one mora, it keeps its heiban pattern:
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-- ~{わたし} (私)
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+私
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+- ~{わたし}
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- ~{わたし}**~{^は}**
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- ~{わたし}**~{^の}**
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- ~{わたし}**~{^に}**
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@@ -128,7 +133,8 @@ Two important exceptions from this rule are **〜から** and **〜だけ**, whi
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## Na-adjective phrases
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Generally, the same rules as for nouns apply. So for stressed na-adjectives the pattern continues with the low pitch:
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-- ~{き\れい} (綺麗)
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+綺麗
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+- ~{き\れい}
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- ~{き\れい}**~{_な}**
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- ~{き\れい}**~{_に}**
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- ~{き\れい}**~{_ですね}**
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@@ -136,7 +142,8 @@ Generally, the same rules as for nouns apply. So for stressed na-adjectives the
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While for heiban, only the first mora of the postposition is high:
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-- ~{かんたん} (簡単)
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+簡単
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+- ~{かんたん}
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- ~{かんたん}**~{^な}**
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- ~{かんたん}**~{^に}**
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- ~{かんたん}**~{^で\すよ}**