(AOZO) KOYA DA KANKA. Hausa Alphabet Hausa has 23 to 25 - TopicsExpress



          

(AOZO) KOYA DA KANKA. Hausa Alphabet Hausa has 23 to 25 consonant sounds, depending on the speaker. The Hausa alphabet consists of 29 letters, as shown below: In the standard Romanized Hausa writing system, there are just five alphabetic symbols representing vowels: a, e, i, o, u. However, in pronunciation, each of these symbols can represent either the short or the long variant of that vowel. That is, it makes a difference in Hausa whether one pronounces a vowel as relatively long or short. The difference in pronuciation between long and short vowels at the ends of words is rather subtle. Short vowels at the end of a word are abruptly cut off by a glottal stop. Long vowels at the end of a word are NOT abruptly cut off. (NOTE: Hausa is the only native language of Nigeria represented on Nigerian currency. Nigerian bank notes have their values written in Hausa, using ajami) LETTER SOUNDS LIKE (IN ENGLISH) glottal stop a short: a in calm long: a in father b b in bed representing an implosive b c ch in child d d in dog representing an implosive d a short: e in get long: English letter a f f in fat g g in go h h in hat i short: i in hit long: English letter e j j in joke k k in kill representing an ejective k l l in leg m m in man n n in not o short: o in hot long: English letter o r either flapped as in Scots English r tilde flapped or trilled as in Scots English s s in see sh sh in shout t t in ten ts English word tutor u short: u in put long: oo in book w w in win y y in you y English words yeah yeah z z in zone The Two rs of Hausa Hausa has two r sounds: 1. A tapped r or trilled r which resembles the r sounds of Spanish, Arabic, and many other languages of the world. This sound is produced by tapping or trilling the tongue against the ridge just behind the upper teeth. The other r is called a retroflex flap. This is similar to the r of Japanese, which is l-like. It is produced by curling the tongue back, then flipping it forward across the ridge behind the upper teeth
Posted on: Sat, 10 May 2014 07:58:02 +0000

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