vipassanā and gacchāmi that will tell you how those are stressed, but i also would like to know the rule for stress. i have this guide right here it might be in there? https://www.pdf-archive.com/2017/04/22/ ... g-pali.pdf
there's also pali primer in two versions http://pali.pratyeka.org/ https://www.budsas.org/uni/u-palicb/e00.htm
me i am just picking up bits and pieces still haven't made a commitment, but if i could confidently pronounce any word then i think i'd be more eager to learn
what about words like anusaya or aṅguttara where all the vowels are short
why nikāya but not anusāya
what about sāvatthī, two stresses in the same word? does a long vowel automatically mean the stress is there; my background is in spanish so i have maybe some unpacked assumptions
i can pronounce dhammacakkappavattana and yathābhūtañāṇadassana i think
e and o are short before some double consonants and consonant clusters but long otherwise. i like this site btw, but in this image are these words just pronounced that way for the rhythm of a chant http://chantpali.org/homage.html#buddhagunavandana
just noticed that binocular also said she learns hearing others speak it. neat