Oto おと 音
アイス /ai su/ can mean both 'ice' and 'ice cream' in Japanese. The word for 'ice' itself in Japanese is 氷 /ko o ri/, romanized 'koori', in which double 'o' indicated long 'o' not 'u' sound.
カストロ /ka su to ro/ (the sound of 'u' is mitigated when reading the whole word)
Fune. A close, albeit still wrong, approximation of the pronunciation would be "foo-nay" To make the Japanese "fu" sound, put your lips and tongue in the position you would if you were to say the English word "Who," but instead of making a "w" sound, try to make an "f" sound from that position. It's like you are blowing out a candle.
チョコレート (cho ko ree to) is Japanese borrowed word for chocolate; however お菓子(o ka shi) is the general Japanese word for sweets, confections.[ee = elongated 'e' sound]
the Japanese word for a cat sound is nya nyaa~! I'm a kitty nyaa~!
That is not a standardized romanization of a Japanese word, nor does it sound like any Japanese word I am familiar with.
'Oto.'
Oto おと 音
"no" in Japanese is "iie". Hold the I sound longer than you normally would. This is because "ie" is also a Japanese word, but the I sound but means house instead of no if you don't hold the I sound very long.
Kayla cannot be written in Japanese kanji because (1) it isn't a Japanese word, and (2) there is no such sound as "l" in Japanese.
ガヴィンIt reads like "ga-bi-n" since Japanese doesn't have a 'v' sound.
Sony
The Japanese word for shade is "kage". It also can mean "shadow" or "other side" depending on the context it is placed in. Also, at times, instead of using the Japanese word, it will be written or pronounced as "sheedo" or "she-do" in an effort to make it sound similar to the English word.
The English word muffin is used in Japan, since there is no original Japanese, but the pronunciation changes a bit. There is no 'f' sound in Japanese, so it's replaced with a blowing sound as in the wh- part of 'whew!'.
アーカイブ = AA-ka-i-bu The word isn't a natural Japanese word so it is written in Katakana, symbols used for foreign words. Why the way it is: the double AA makes a similar sound to the English ar sound: examples haato, (heart) sukaato (skirt) the Ka and i sound be self explanatory and the Japanese have a Vu, vi, vo, va, ve but they aren't really used. Most of the time the v sounds are made with b-vowel in Japanese. Hopes this helps :3
neko is how its said, the 'e' sound is said like 'ea' in bread