Pronunciation guide
Japanese is not a tonal language like Chinese or Thai, and is comparatively easy to pronounce.
Vowels
Japanese has both short and long vowels and the distinction is often important. In romanized Japanese, long vowels are marked with a macron, so that o represents "long O".
a
like 'a' in "father"
i
like 'i' in "machine"
u
like 'oo' in "hoop"
e
like 'e' in "set"
o
like 'o' in "rope"
n
short 'n' at the end of a syllable, pronounced as 'm' before 'b',
'p' or 'm'.
Note that "u" is often weak at the end of syllables. In particular, the common endings -desu and -masu are usually pronounced as "des'" and "mas'" respectively.
Accent and intonation
Avoid placing too much emphasis on particular words or syllables. Japanese does have stress and intonation, but it is significantly flatter than English. Mastering word stress is a more advanced topic and neglecting it at this point should not interfere with meaning. Just trying to keep your intonation relatively flat will make your attempts to speak Japanese more comprehensible to local listeners. When asking questions, you can raise the tone at the end, as in English.
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