HomeJapaneseI watched CSM and they are using ア,ウ or other vowels with apostrophe when it comes to screamy scenes. I’m just wonderig o what context would this be used cause it cant be find in keyboard and how do you pronounce it? Thanks!
I watched CSM and they are using ア,ウ or other vowels with apostrophe when it comes to screamy scenes. I’m just wonderig o what context would this be used cause it cant be find in keyboard and how do you pronounce it? Thanks!
I watched CSM and they are using ア,ウ or other vowels with apostrophe when it comes to screamy scenes. I’m just wonderig o what context would this be used cause it cant be find in keyboard and how do you pronounce it? Thanks!
I’ll also add that CSM uses ヴヴヴゥン a lot when Denji is revving up.
Nowadays, ヴ is how Japanese people spell the English V sound, so it’s basically the Japanese way of spelling “Vroom Vroom”
If you type “vu” on your romaji keyboard it should correct to ヴ.
I’m enjoying the hell out of it on Hulu!!
The *orthodox* way: You type だくてん (dakuten) and browse candidates to add a dakuten (゛) mark after the character; same for はんだくてん (handakuten, the ゜ mark). And these “characters” are by no mean standardised, so they have no standard pronunciation. Maybe a creaky voice, or like when you sceam against an electric fan, or just… moaning (R18 doujinshis as references). Just indicate that it’s not your usual “a” but “a with diacritics”, whatever that means.
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yeah it’s informal, not sure if there are unicode characters for it, i normally just type ” after ア”
it’s for extreme screams, like when a person’s voice breaks, only ever seen it in manga
A few moths ago, I came across a [Japanese YouTuber](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RPfpAs9x6JA) that talked about this.
I’ll also add that CSM uses ヴヴヴゥン a lot when Denji is revving up.
Nowadays, ヴ is how Japanese people spell the English V sound, so it’s basically the Japanese way of spelling “Vroom Vroom”
If you type “vu” on your romaji keyboard it should correct to ヴ.
I’m enjoying the hell out of it on Hulu!!
The *orthodox* way: You type だくてん (dakuten) and browse candidates to add a dakuten (゛) mark after the character; same for はんだくてん (handakuten, the ゜ mark).
And these “characters” are by no mean standardised, so they have no standard pronunciation. Maybe a creaky voice, or like when you sceam against an electric fan, or just… moaning (R18 doujinshis as references). Just indicate that it’s not your usual “a” but “a with diacritics”, whatever that means.