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?
2011년 9월 5일 오후 10:20
답변 · 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!
2011년 9월 5일
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]
2011년 9월 6일
It serves to double the "t" of "te", thus making it "tte". Come on, man, that wasn't hard.
2011년 9월 6일
아직도 답을 찾지 못하셨나요?
질문을 남겨보세요. 원어민이 도움을 줄 수 있을 거예요!