How to pronounce the consonant sound in Japanese? Are there any techniques?

Enter the first letter of the Romanized kana sound twice in a row. For example, for いっかい, enter: YiKKaYi.

Hint: Type the first letter of the second kana twice. ?

For example: Iron piece (てっぺん) -----The first letter of ぺ is p, so after typing te, type p twice, and finally type other Roman characters. . School-----かっこう-------kakkou (hit k twice). 雑志----ざっし---------zasshi (hit s twice).

Long pronunciation: Hiragana: the Romaji for him. Such as: そう----sou.もう----mou けい---kei piece.

Kana: Press the "—" key on the large keyboard (now press shift, then press "—"). For example: ス-パ-·マ-ケット Dial: Double-click n.

Extended information:

Japanese input method refers to the encoding method used to input Japanese into devices such as computers or mobile phones. The Japanese input method is mainly designed as a conversion system based on hiragana (pronunciation), and this also derives two input methods: converting to hiragana by inputting romaji or inputting hiragana directly. The latter requires memorizing the hiragana keyboard first. Distribution, so there is no shortage of users of both methods. Some software also uses GUI word selection methods and even supports handwriting mode as an aid.

The Japanese Industrial Standards (JIS) stipulate the discharge position of kana on Japanese keyboards. Most keyboards sold in Japan are QWERTY keyboards. Q W E R T Y corresponds to the following kana on the Japanese keyboard: たていすかん(Ta Te I Su Ka N')

Japanese keyboards marked with kana are quite rare in markets outside Japan, but inputting hiragana directly does not There are hardware limitations. A JIS keyboard is designed to have 106 or 109 keys. Even through settings, ordinary 101/102/105 cannot type the full 50 Japanese tones. Most new operating systems support this function.

Because Japanese input is based on hiragana, inputting complete Japanese also requires converting kanji, katakana and ordinary English characters and punctuation marks. So there will be a few more special buttons on the Japanese keyboard. If it is a normal keyboard, you can use the Alt symbol key "~" to switch between Japanese input and English input. In addition, after entering kana, press f6 for full-width hiragana, press f7 for full-width katakana, press f8 for half-width katakana, and press f9 to switch between English uppercase and lowercase letters.

The keyboard operation for switching between Chinese and Japanese input methods can be freely set. In the setting options of the language bar, select 'Advanced Key Settings'. Select the Japanese input method column and you can freely set the shortcut keys for conversion. In common Japanese input methods such as Microsoft Japanese Input Method (IME-2002 and other versions), the default button is space

Generally speaking, since the Japanese input method provides two types of Romaji and direct kana Input method, so although a Japanese keyboard with kana is used, most people (whether Japanese or not) still input Japanese by inputting romaji, and only a small number of people use the method of directly pressing kana on the keyboard to input . However, the Roman characters of this input method are different from the general ones. For example, the customary Roman characters of ぢ and じ are both ji, while the former of the input method is di; the ん of the input method needs to be entered as nn.