Ahhhh, well I did forget to talk about emphasis, didn't I? Okay, to be honest, I didn't forget, it's just a bit more complicated.Stentor wrote:That's great, Drax, thank you!!
Maybe you could also enlighten us on the rules regarding which syllable to put the emphasis on? This sometimes seems unusual and irregular, but I assume there is some sort of system behind it?
For instance, news reporters have been saying Fukushima at least 3 different ways, each emphasising a different syllable; FU-ku-shi-ma, fu-KU-shi-ma, fu-ku-SHI-ma. I figured at one point some of them must have been told the correct way of saying it.

The short version is that there is technically no emphasis in Japanese, at least, not in the syllabic stress. All syllables should be pronounced with the same emphasis.
However, Japanese does have a tone system. It's not as complicated as Chinese, though, and only covers 'high' and 'low.' Words have a high/low structure to them that dictates when one should swap tones or stay. If you listen to a Japanese person speak, listen past the words to the 'background' tone and you should be able to key in on it going up and down.
It gets a little more complicated when stringing together a bunch of words, but I'll leave it there. This nuance of the language is probably one of the last things that I'll ever accomplish...!