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Sokuon

The sokuon is a Japanese symbol in the form of a small hiragana or katakana tsu, as well as the various consonants represented by it. In less formal language, it is called chiisai tsu (小さいつ) or chiisana tsu (小さなつ), meaning "small tsu". It serves multiple purposes in Japanese writing.

Appearance
In both hiragana and katakana, the appears as a reduced in size: ==Use in Japanese==
Use in Japanese
The main use of the is to mark a geminate consonant, The sokuon is also used at the end of a sentence, to indicate a glottal stop (IPA , a sharp or cut-off articulation), which may indicate angry or surprised speech. This pronunciation is also used for exceptions mentioned before (e.g., a sokuon before a vowel kana). There is no standard way of romanizing the sokuon that is at the end of a sentence. In English writing, this is often rendered as an em dash. Other conventions are to render it as t or as an apostrophe. In the International Phonetic Alphabet, the sokuon is transcribed with either a colon-like length mark or a doubled consonant: • • or • • or The sokuon represents a mora, thus for example the word consists of only two syllables, but four morae: ni-p-po-n. ==Etymology==
Etymology
Major Japanese dictionaries list , as a synonym for . This suggests an origin in Middle Chinese phonology, where sokusei (), also known as , referred to a checked tone, or a syllable that ends in an unreleased plosive (see 促聲). 促聲 contrasts with 舒聲 (literally "leisurely voice") which is a syllable that ends in a vowel, semivowel, or nasal (see 舒聲). The Meiji-era linguist Ōshima Masatake used the terms sokuon ("plosive") and hatsuon ("nasal") to describe ending consonants in Chinese (which he called , an outdated term used from the Edo period until after World War II Another of Ōshima's descriptions even more explicitly related the terms sokuon and hatsuon to the four tones of Middle Chinese. Modern Japanese sokuon arose, in no small part, from consonant assimilation that occurred when an Early Middle Japanese approximation of a Chinese sokuon, such as pu (labial), t(i) (lingual) or ki/ku (guttural), was followed by an obstruent (plosive or fricative). == Use in other languages ==
Use in other languages
In addition to Japanese, sokuon is used in Okinawan katakana orthographies to represent glottal or ejective consonants. Ainu katakana uses a small both for a final t-sound and to represent a sokuon (there is no ambiguity however, as gemination is allophonic with syllable-final t). As with tsu, sokuon’s katatana form can be used as an emoticon due to its similar appearance to the smile emoticon. == Computer input ==
Computer input
There are several methods of entering the sokuon using a computer or word-processor, such as xtu, ltu, ltsu, etc. Some systems, such as Kotoeri for macOS and the Microsoft IME, generate a sokuon if an applicable consonant letter is typed twice; for example tta generates . == Other representations ==
Other representations
Braille: • Computer encodings ==See also==
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