tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8808639380980092075.post2476956297470119436..comments2024-02-12T15:47:15.904+01:00Comments on Always greener: Fukushima = Hukushima?Craighttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13753056386255047108noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8808639380980092075.post-39330299669584974162016-01-02T10:30:46.276+01:002016-01-02T10:30:46.276+01:00There is another city Hukushima... A friend of min...There is another city Hukushima... A friend of mine stayed at the hospital of Hukushima last year.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8808639380980092075.post-21863649094132455662012-11-06T06:10:15.422+01:002012-11-06T06:10:15.422+01:00This pronunciation question comes down to how the ...This pronunciation question comes down to how the Japanese language is structured. The characters are moras- there are five vowel sounds (roughly the same as Spanish vowels), but rather than have separate consonants, each consonant has five characters whose end sound matches each of the five vowels. E.g., there's no "k", but rather "ka", "ke", "ki", &Jeremynoreply@blogger.com