eppie Posted May 16, 2014 Report Share Posted May 16, 2014 I always notice that every time a Japanese tries to speak in English, the L sound is converted into R. Is there a particular reason for this? I'm not sure if this is true with all Japanese but most seem to have trouble with the letter L. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lasonax Posted May 16, 2014 Report Share Posted May 16, 2014 Honestly it's as simple as the fact that they don't use L in their own language.The same way we would have a hard time saying some sounds in some african language, or arabic language, they have a hard time saying sounds they are not used to.Surely we could argue that with every new language you are learning, there are new sounds and all, but atleast for me, I feel that japanese isn't actually that far away in terms of "raw-sounds", most of the sounds they use are already in use in english. (If you read Remembering the Kana, you would of course know this already).It does however sound a bit funny when they name an anime "Braku Burretu" or something like that, when it's named "Black Bullet", and "Braku Burretu" is simply their way of saying it. I may have spelled that romaji wrong, I don't quite remember how they spelt it... But yeah, if they change the sounds when they speak english, I wouldn't be surprised. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Miya Posted May 17, 2014 Report Share Posted May 17, 2014 Like Lasonax has said, Japanese doesn't have a "L" in their language. The closest we get is "R" sound in ら (ra), り (ri), る (ru), れ (re), ろ (ro). So it's difficult for the Japanese to pronounce the "L" sound. Names like "Lisa" in Japanese are pronounced Risa for that reason. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
eppie Posted May 27, 2014 Author Report Share Posted May 27, 2014 Honestly it's as simple as the fact that they don't use L in their own language.The same way we would have a hard time saying some sounds in some african language, or arabic language, they have a hard time saying sounds they are not used to.Surely we could argue that with every new language you are learning, there are new sounds and all, but atleast for me, I feel that japanese isn't actually that far away in terms of "raw-sounds", most of the sounds they use are already in use in english. (If you read Remembering the Kana, you would of course know this already).It does however sound a bit funny when they name an anime "Braku Burretu" or something like that, when it's named "Black Bullet", and "Braku Burretu" is simply their way of saying it. I may have spelled that romaji wrong, I don't quite remember how they spelt it... But yeah, if they change the sounds when they speak english, I wouldn't be surprised.Pretty interesting and quite funny too (Braku Burretu :grin:). I really don't notice the many "R"s while hearing Japanese talk in their native language. It only gets highly noticeable when they started talking in English. Thanks guys. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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