The following table summarizes the
phonetic shifts indicated by the
dakuten and
handakuten. Literally, morae with
dakuten are , while those without are . However, the
handakuten (lit. "half-muddy mark") does not follow this pattern. (Yellow shading indicates non-standard use.) Handakuten on
ka,
ki,
ku,
ke,
ko (rendered as ) represent the sound of
ng in
singing (), which is an
allophone of in many dialects of Japanese. They are not used in normal Japanese writing, but may be used by linguists and in dictionaries (or to represent characters in fiction who speak that way). This is called ''
. Another rare application of handakuten
is on the r
-series, to mark them as explicitly l
: , and so forth. This is only done in technical or pedantic contexts, as many Japanese speakers cannot tell the difference between r
and l''. Additionally, linguists sometimes use to represent in cases when speaker pronounces at the beginning of a word as a moraic nasal. In katakana only, the
dakuten may also be added to the character
u and a small vowel character to create a sound, as in ヴァ
va. However, a hiragana version of this character also exists, with somewhat sporadic compatibility across platforms (). As does not exist in Japanese, this usage applies only to some modern loanwords and remains relatively uncommon, and e.g.
Venus is typically transliterated as (
bīnasu) instead of (
vīnasu). Japanese speakers, however, pronounce both the same, with or , an occasional allophone of intervocalic . An even less common method is to add
dakuten to the
w-series, reviving the mostly obsolete characters for () and (). is represented by using /u/, as above; becomes despite its normally being silent. Precomposed characters exist for this method as well ( ), although most
IMEs do not have a convenient way to enter them. In
Ainu texts, handakuten can be used with the katakana to make it a /t͡s/ sound,
ce [t͡se] (which is interchangeable with ), and is used with small
fu to represent a final
p, . In addition, handakuten can be combined with either katakana or (
tsu and
to) to make a [tu̜] sound, or . In
Miyakoan, handakuten can be used with (normally [i]) to represent the vowel . In informal writing,
dakuten is occasionally used on vowels to indicate a shocked or strangled articulation; for example, on or .
Dakuten can also be occasionally used with to indicate a guttural hum, growl, or similar sound.
Kana iteration marks The
dakuten can also be added to hiragana and katakana
iteration marks, indicating that the previous kana is repeated with voicing: Both signs are relatively rare, but can occasionally be found in personal names such as
Misuzu () or brand names such as
Isuzu (いすゞ). In these cases the pronunciation is identical to writing the kana out in full. A longer, multi-character iteration mark called the
kunojiten (), only used in
vertical writing, may also have a
dakuten added (). ==Other communicative representations==