Difference between revisions of "User:Chekhov MacGuffin/Katakana"

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!''D''
 
!''D''
 
|bgcolor="#EFFAFA"|<big>ダ</big><br>da  
 
|bgcolor="#EFFAFA"|<big>ダ</big><br>da  
|bgcolor="#E7F5DE"| ヂ|<big style="color:#808080">ヂ</big><br>ji<ref group="note" name="rendaku">These kana are primarily used for indicating a voiced consonant in the middle of a compound word and can never begin a word. Rarely used in katakana.</ref>  
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|bgcolor="#E7F5DE"|<big style="color:#808080">ヂ</big><br>ji<ref group="note" name="rendaku">These kana are primarily used for indicating a voiced consonant in the middle of a compound word and can never begin a word. Rarely used in katakana.</ref>  
|bgcolor="#E7F5DE"| ヅ|<big style="color:#808080">ヅ</big><br>zu<ref group="note" name="rendaku"/>  
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|bgcolor="#E7F5DE"|<big style="color:#808080">ヅ</big><br>zu<ref group="note" name="rendaku"/>  
 
|bgcolor="#EFFAFA"|<big>デ</big><br>de
 
|bgcolor="#EFFAFA"|<big>デ</big><br>de
 
|bgcolor="#EFFAFA"|<big>ド</big><br>do
 
|bgcolor="#EFFAFA"|<big>ド</big><br>do

Revision as of 00:03, 12 March 2014

References

  1. ^ a b c These now-obsolete katakana appeared in some textbooks as early as 1873 (Meiji period
  2. ^ In modern times, ウォ ("wo") is used as the representation of a "wo" sound instead. The katakana version of the wo (kana)|wo kana, ヲ, is primarily used, albeit rarely, to represent the Grammatical particle|particle を in katakana. The particle is commonly pronounced the same as the o (kana)|o kana.
  3. ^ a b c d e These kana are primarily used for indicating a voiced consonant in the middle of a compound word and can never begin a word. Rarely used in katakana.