RavenDarkfellow
Orange Belt
Hey all,
I'm sure plenty of you know this already, so no disrespect (Osu!) but the hobby linguist in my gets triggered every time I see this misspelt. I understand why it happens, and I understand why some people argue the legitimacy of writing "oss" (primarily because that's the way it's pronounced) but there is a clear correct answer to the "Osu or Oss?" question, which I'm going to explain now.
The correct written form is "Osu". It is still pronounced as "Oss"-- or, for a more phonetically unambiguous guide, it should sound like "OH-ss". Imagine you're saying "Ice" but instead of the long i vowel sound, you're using the long o sound.
Reason:
Japanese and English are not very inherently compatible languages. They come from extremely different root languages, and aren't even the same type of language. (i.e. English is a consciously-created language, and Japanese [or more accurately: Nihongo] is a naturally-developed language.) So over the years of translating up to the modern day, many misunderstandings and mistakes were made. Today however, those differences and misunderstandings have been almost completely weeded out, and we now have a thorough set of reliable rules.
One of those rules, is the transliteration of the "alphabets". Japanese doesn't have an "alphabet" like English exactly, but it does have a close approximation. Rather than individual letters constructing words, they use full sounds (with the exception of vowels, which also transliterate to individual letters). So in the case of the word that sounds like "OH-ss", it's composed of the characters for:
"O"
and
"Su"
So when it's written in Romaji, (i.e. English/Roman characters) it's written together as "Osu". However, almost always, when a "u" (and often when "i") is at the end of a word, unless there are two of them, it is only pronounced very subtley, or more often in the case of "u", not pronounced at all (as in "desu", which means is/are/am).
Note: (For those more well-versed in Japanese) I did not cover the Kanji writing of "Osu" because it's not relevant to my point here. Regardless of the Kanji, the Kana writing is your guide to pronunciation, Kanji is your guide to meaning. This post is about the linguistics of "Osu", not its meaning, which has been well-covered in other posts.
Cheers, and Osu!
I'm sure plenty of you know this already, so no disrespect (Osu!) but the hobby linguist in my gets triggered every time I see this misspelt. I understand why it happens, and I understand why some people argue the legitimacy of writing "oss" (primarily because that's the way it's pronounced) but there is a clear correct answer to the "Osu or Oss?" question, which I'm going to explain now.
The correct written form is "Osu". It is still pronounced as "Oss"-- or, for a more phonetically unambiguous guide, it should sound like "OH-ss". Imagine you're saying "Ice" but instead of the long i vowel sound, you're using the long o sound.
Reason:
Japanese and English are not very inherently compatible languages. They come from extremely different root languages, and aren't even the same type of language. (i.e. English is a consciously-created language, and Japanese [or more accurately: Nihongo] is a naturally-developed language.) So over the years of translating up to the modern day, many misunderstandings and mistakes were made. Today however, those differences and misunderstandings have been almost completely weeded out, and we now have a thorough set of reliable rules.
One of those rules, is the transliteration of the "alphabets". Japanese doesn't have an "alphabet" like English exactly, but it does have a close approximation. Rather than individual letters constructing words, they use full sounds (with the exception of vowels, which also transliterate to individual letters). So in the case of the word that sounds like "OH-ss", it's composed of the characters for:
"O"
and
"Su"
So when it's written in Romaji, (i.e. English/Roman characters) it's written together as "Osu". However, almost always, when a "u" (and often when "i") is at the end of a word, unless there are two of them, it is only pronounced very subtley, or more often in the case of "u", not pronounced at all (as in "desu", which means is/are/am).
Note: (For those more well-versed in Japanese) I did not cover the Kanji writing of "Osu" because it's not relevant to my point here. Regardless of the Kanji, the Kana writing is your guide to pronunciation, Kanji is your guide to meaning. This post is about the linguistics of "Osu", not its meaning, which has been well-covered in other posts.
Cheers, and Osu!