phonetic Transcription /…/
The symbols between slashes represent how to pronounce the word.
| Symbol | Explanation | Example |
|---|---|---|
| a, i, u, e, o | Japanese vowels | /watashi/ |
| k, s, t, n, m, etc. | Consonants | /neko/ |
| sh | Like English “sh” in “ship” | /shiroi/ |
| ch | Like English “ch” in “cheese” | /chiisai/ |
| ː (long mark) | Long vowel | /supoːtsu/ = “supootsu” |
| ii, ee | Double vowels (long) | /chiisai/, /gakusee/ |
Pitch Accent Symbols
Japanese uses pitch accent (high and low tones), not stress accent like English.
 ̄ (Flat line)
- Indicates heiban (平板) or “flat” accent
- Pattern: Low-High-High-High…
- The pitch rises after the first mora and stays high
- Examples: 私 ̄, 名前 ̄, 猫 ̄
┐ (Downstep mark)
- Indicates a drop in pitch at that position
- The pitch falls immediately after the marked syllable
- Examples: 好き┐ = suKI↘, 青┐ = aO↘
③, ② (Numbers)
- Indicates which mora the pitch drops after
- ② = pitch drops after the 2nd mora
- ③ = pitch drops after the 3rd mora
- Examples:
- スポーツ② = su-PO↘-o-tsu
- 小さい③ = chi-i-SA↘-i
Summary Table
| Symbol | Name | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| /…/ | Phonetic transcription | Pronunciation guide |
|  ̄ | Heiban | Flat pattern (no drop) |
| ┐ | Downstep | Pitch drops here |
| ①②③ | Accent position | Pitch drops after this mora |
| ː | Length mark | Long vowel |
Note
These pitch accent notations are based on Tokyo (standard) Japanese. Pitch patterns may vary in other dialects.













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