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I'm working on a way to mark a text with pitch accent, so that while you read, a little mark would indicate, in a non-intrusive way, where the downfall occurs. I've searched and it appears that no publisher offers books/stories like this. I was wondering if there'd be any interest among other learners.
Edited: 2012-04-05, 2:26 pm
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I would be, certainly. I think a substantial portion of Japanese learners would be ... judging by other pitch accent threads we've had, there is interest in learning about it, but it's really hard to get good materials on it. It's particularly hard to get materials for in-context pitch accent (there are, of course, dictionaries that mark pitch accent on a per word basis, which is useful, but not ideal.)
Ideally, I'd like to see a pitch-marked collection of short stories with accompanying audio - In fact, I really wouldn't have much use for pitch-accent marked texts that -don't- have accompanying audio.
Of course, there should also be a few pages devoted to charts and explanations - I think I have enough charts and explanations now, cobbled together from various links, but not everyone does.
(Although actually I still don't have the NHK accent dictionary, which I do want to get in an electronic dictionary or as software at some point, so ... I don't know if it pronounces words in isolation or has sentences. I may have been told which once before actually but I've forgotten.)
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A lot of people worry about the pitch accent, but I wonder if having an entire text filled with accent marks is a good solution. English is a stress-accented language, yet is anyone aware of an book written in English that has every stressed syllable marked? I'd wager that listening, rather than reading, is more important for mimicking the Japanese pitch accent (although, a pitch accent marked text with an audio recording would be ideal!).