Re: Akiko
in reply to a message by Agata
Ah-KEY-Koh
All the sylables are to be said shortly with the emphasis on the second one. (I take Japanese at school)
Back in 1775
My Marine Corps came alive
First there came the color gold
To show the world that we are bold
Then there came the color red
To show the world the blood we shed
OOH RAH
Semper Fidelis
All the sylables are to be said shortly with the emphasis on the second one. (I take Japanese at school)
Back in 1775
My Marine Corps came alive
First there came the color gold
To show the world that we are bold
Then there came the color red
To show the world the blood we shed
OOH RAH
Semper Fidelis
Replies
I really don't think that that's it. It's what I initially thought. However I'm reading a novel with a character named Akiko and she ridicules Americans who pronounce her name that way. The real pronunciation is not given.
This message was edited 4/8/2007, 12:32 PM
No, there is no stress on the second syllable. It is ah-kee-koh with all syllables stressed equally.
Thanks!
I think there is no stress, but to our ears there might be one ^^; Because people her tend to stress a syllable too much, a real stress would be too much in japanese ... but simply listen to it somewhere on youtube, for example in videos about the Akiko Suzuki, when they announce her name at the beginning ^^