Thomas The Brit
The use of っ (tsu) This has been driving me mad ever since I learned how to read Hiragana. がんばってくださいね is pronounced "ganbatte kudasai ne", right? Why is there the っ (tsu) there if you don't pronounce it? What purpose does it serve?
Sep 5, 2011 10:20 PM
Answers · 4
2
large『つ』 and small『っ』 『がんばつて』----->ga n ba tsu te 『がんばって』------>ga n ba tte 『あさって(asatte) the day after tomorrow』 がんばってくださいね!
September 5, 2011
1
Just like everybody said, it doubles any sound that goes next. (「っか」- kka, 「っぽ」- ppo, etc.) And if there's no more kana next, it just reduces (or strenghtens?) the tone of previous sound (「えっ」- Huh?) or halt it like "..." in the middle of a word. [But that's just what I think; correct me if I'm mistaken]
September 6, 2011
It serves to double the "t" of "te", thus making it "tte". Come on, man, that wasn't hard.
September 6, 2011
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