Saki Fujita (Miku's voice provider) is not a native English speaker, and I believe is not even fluent in English, so some of it could just be a pronunciation aspect of the voicebank. One thing I should add though which might explain why Miku may still not sound exactly what you expect even if the correct phonemes are added. Click on the word/syllable directly below the note and then input "I v z". Japanese Phonemes on Phoneme Entry Screen Contents 1 Language Differences 2 English to Japanese 2.1 Techniques and Tips 2.1.1 Working the Vowels 2.1.2 Palatalization 2.1.3 Liquid Consonant 2.2 Conversion Chart 2.2.1 Footnotes 2.2. This will allow you to put individual phonemes for each note. The following is a tutorial made for VOCALOID fans by fellow VOCALOID fans. Make sure the Protect box is checked and hit Enter.įor V5 - Go to Job > Lyric Input Mode, and see if there is an X on "Phonetic Symbol Mode". ![]() I tested with my English Vocaloid and it looks to me the phonemes to use for "-ives" part is "I v z".Īfter making the note in which you're trying to get Miku to sing "-ives" do either of the following, depending on what editor you have:įor V4 - Right click the note, go to Note Property, click on the phonetic part, and type "I v z" in the box. But sometimes you might find it more accurate if you type specific phonemes yourself. Generally, for V5, the phonemes should automatically be put in if you type certain words. I don't have Miku V4 English, but I do have other English Vocaloids. If it's PS I can't exactly help since I don't have it. Are you using Piapro Studio, VOCALOID 4, or VOCALOID 5 for this?
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