Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 748
Thanks:
0
Alright, we all know that in Japanese the "L" sound is equivalent to "R" sound. What I want to know is there any significance to how one pronounces them like dialects, ancestry, gender or areas?
I ask because I was just listening to Yui and her pronunciation of これから is really characteristic ie. in most Japanese I listen to its clearly "korekara" but she just says "kolekala" and if I remember correctly she is consistent with it. She is from Fukuoka so I thought it might be how they sound in the south?
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 675
Thanks:
0
I don't think it's R or L, it's a sound somewhere in the middle that we don't have in English, which is why it's a bit difficult. It's closer to L than R though.
When I first started speaking Japanese I pronounced words using R and then L for my Japanese fried and she said L sounded way better than R so I'd go for that until you can get the right sound. Now if I say これから with the English R sound it sounds very wrong.
With regards to dialects I really don't know...
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 762
Thanks:
0
Lightly pronouncing D puts your tongue somewhere around where it should be, but the movement is different for らりるれろ.
Joined: May 2010
Posts: 25
Thanks:
0
I also noticed Yui's l-ish pronunciation (from listening to the FMA Brotherhood opening song, lol).
I don't know why its like that, though.
Edited: 2010-06-18, 6:48 pm
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 3,944
Thanks:
11
Hmm, it still sounds like the normal ラ行 to me, but I'm not Japanese.
It can also be because she's singing; sometimes people enunciate things differently when singing. Her speaking voice has completely normal sounding ら行 syllables.
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 23
Thanks:
0
Some singers do that on purpose to sound cool or original or something. I asked about this on lang-8 recently and that was the answer I got, lol. If you know the band Jyukai the singer also pronounces all her ラ行 as L, and she's from Osaka.
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 3,851
Thanks:
0
Don't read too much into it, it's just like Japanese radio DJs who try to sound like gaijin, emulating American radio DJs. It isn't their "real voice".
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 748
Thanks:
0
I see, thanks for all your replies.