The āyā sound from adding a second dash on a vowel.
The āwā sound from putting two vowels next to each other.
But amusingly, the way I was taught, ć and ć are pronounced the same. I dunno if thatās a difference between Seoul and Busan accents, or my teacher just oversimplifying for our sake because they are at least similar (oneās close-mid, the other open-mid, but both are front unrounded vowels, according to the phonemes Wikipedia says they make, and Wikipedia even suggests "bed as examples of both for Australian English pronunciation). So if you do take it that way, it does become 23. But Iām guessing when you said 23 you were forgetting ć makes an āngā when itās a syllable coda? Or maybe forgetting the āwā?
I mis-mathed o. When I mentally corrected the number of sounds, I accidentally subtracted one rather than noting 0 additional sounds from o. Still, itās interesting that itās so many fewer sounds. It also sent me down a bit of a phonology rabbit hole, where I learned that Korean was likely used as the basis for the written script in āTunic.ā
I would say 24 based on that guide.
14 consonants with their own characters.
8 vowels.
The āyā sound from adding a second dash on a vowel.
The āwā sound from putting two vowels next to each other.
But amusingly, the way I was taught, ć and ć are pronounced the same. I dunno if thatās a difference between Seoul and Busan accents, or my teacher just oversimplifying for our sake because they are at least similar (oneās close-mid, the other open-mid, but both are front unrounded vowels, according to the phonemes Wikipedia says they make, and Wikipedia even suggests "bed as examples of both for Australian English pronunciation). So if you do take it that way, it does become 23. But Iām guessing when you said 23 you were forgetting ć makes an āngā when itās a syllable coda? Or maybe forgetting the āwā?
I mis-mathed o. When I mentally corrected the number of sounds, I accidentally subtracted one rather than noting 0 additional sounds from o. Still, itās interesting that itās so many fewer sounds. It also sent me down a bit of a phonology rabbit hole, where I learned that Korean was likely used as the basis for the written script in āTunic.ā