Talk:UTAU/@comment-27598213-20190108194820/@comment-27598213-20190109151933

I'm kinda bad at metaphors, I was just trying to explain that I feel like, if assembled correctly, the building blocks can become a more complex product. I did a little research, and apparently the method I’m thinking about is heard of: Using the monophonic method seems like the fastest way to make an UTAU, but I may consider trying out CV VC, or VCV, since it supposedly sounds better.
 * CV, which stands for "constant vowel". The sounds go under two groups: vowels (a, i, u, e, o) and constant vowels (ka, wa, ru, me, sho, tsu etc.)
 * VCV, stands for "vowel consonant vowel" but is also known as Triphones/Triphonics. This is a method to make the UTAUloid sound natural in UTAU. You have to record a few sounds in one file and split them up with the help of oto.ini.
 * Monophones, a.k.a. "monophonics" are phonemes that consist of one sound.
 * CV VC means "Constant vowel vowel constant" and is similar to VCV, but tends to be easier to create and use. It tends to have more recordings and usually it sounds different than VCV.

If I do mess up something, though, I could always redo it. That’s a difference between making an UTAU and making cookies. You usually can’t undo something you’ve done while baking, but you can when recording.