Originally Posted by
chaika konnichiwa, taty,
But really, your lame note about R/L does not get you off the hot seat. For native English speakers, Japanese is a piece of cake (partly because all the sounds are easy and no stuff like palatalization, and you can even omit the optional tones with no impediment to understanding). I studied Japanese for one summer, so I'm a real expert. JK.
sayonara.
Konnichiwa! Nihongo no hatsuon ga eigo wo hanasu kata tame ni sonnani yasui to omoimasu ka?
I should agree that the Japanese pronunciation is easy for English speakers under the condition if you don't master it well. The real Japanese phonetics is a bit different than you might think of it.
The palatalization does exist in Japanese. O-kyaku-san (guest) IS pronounced with a soft K' (phonetically, [`ok'akusan]), there is no real [k-y-a] sound sequence. The same is true for MYA, MYO, HYO, BYA and other KAIYOON syllables (all of them have palatalized consonants).
Finally, the Japanese SHI (as in WATASHI) is not a real English SH sound, and the Japanese CHI and JI are also different from English ones. They are not sibillants too much, but they are palatal counterparts for Japanese S, T and D.
The things are not so simple, though...