Given that the track is is in Japan, I would imagine you pronounce the 'Tsu' as in 'cat soup'. The 'ku' would be as in 'mini cooper', and the 'ba' as in 'bahrain'. These are spoken together reasonably quickly so as to flow more.Tsukuba
Is the 'T' silent? I beleive it is, my mate beleives its not. Who is right?
Given that the track is is in Japan, I would imagine you pronounce the 'Tsu' as in 'cat soup'. The 'ku' would be as in 'mini cooper', and the 'ba' as in 'bahrain'. These are spoken together reasonably quickly so as to flow more.
I guess in western translation, it does not matter whether you pronounce the initial T or not (as it is short and semi silent anyway, it makes the su sound more attacky), but it is important to remember that the first syllable is not pronounced as 'suck'!
I'm pretty some that's right, but no doubt someone will correct me (and I'll freely admit that my Japanese pronunciation is far from perfect). Hope that helps. 👍
Do you say Tsunami like Teh-Su-Nami or Sue-Nami?
Do you say Tsunami like Teh-Su-Nami or Sue-Nami?
MasterStorm has it, and neither of your ways is totally right. The "tsu" is a single syllable, like in the budget electronics brand "Matsui", or Jamie Oliver's latest fatsuit.
Seeing as we just mentioned TVRs, I shall now have to profess complete ignorance of how to pronounce TVR Chimaera
DE
I think MasterStorm's intention was to imply a single-syllable "Tsu."
Yep. That's why I said that he had it right and MatttheTuner's options weren't.
DE - "Chi" with a hard K and to rhyme with "pie", "maer" as in kat and, errr, "a".