Lesson 1-4 — Katakana

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Reading Practice

Test yourself — can you read these before checking the answers? Many are country names and character names, which are excellent early practice.

KatakanaAnswer
ヤナYana
ロシアRussia
アメリカAmerica
カナダCanada
ドイツGermany
パナマPanama
ルフィLuffy
サンジSanji
カイドウKaido
ゾロZoro
トムTom
アンソニーAnthony
ジョージGeorge
キャサリンCatherine
キャンベラCanberra
パースPerth

💡 Notice how foreign sounds get adapted to Japanese syllables. “Germany” becomes ドイツ (from the German Deutsch), and English “th” sounds (as in Anthony) become サ or ジ, since Japanese has no “th.” Learning these adaptation patterns will help you read and even guess new katakana words.

Long Vowels in Katakana — 長音符(ちょうおんぷ)

In katakana, long vowel sounds are written with a horizontal dash: ー. This dash extends the vowel of the preceding character by one full beat (mora).

In hiragana, long vowels are written by adding an extra vowel character (e.g. おかさん). In katakana, the dash replaces that extra vowel.

KatakanaRomajiMeaning
ルールrūrurule
ミームmīmumeme
ルームrūmuroom
コーヒーkōhīcoffee
ケーキkēkicake

⚠️ Vowel length changes meaning! In Japanese, a long vowel and a short vowel are completely different sounds — and can mean completely different words. Always pay attention to the ー:

  • ビル (biru) = building vs ビール (bīru) = beer
  • おばさん (aunt) vs おばあさん (grandmother) — the same principle in hiragana

Getting the length wrong can turn “beer” into “building,” so this is well worth mastering early.


The Katakana Chart

aiueo
Vowels
K
S
T
N
H
M
Y
R
W
N

💡 Hiragana vs Katakana: The two scripts represent identical sounds — カ and か are both “ka.” The only differences are their shapes and the contexts in which they’re used. Katakana characters tend to be more angular and made of straighter lines, while hiragana are more rounded and flowing. Mastering both scripts is essential for reading Japanese.

Easily Confused Pairs

Several katakana characters look strikingly similar and are a common source of errors. Pay close attention to these:

PairCharactersHow to tell them apart
so / nソ / ンソ’s stroke comes down at a steeper, vertical angle; ン’s stroke sweeps up more horizontally
tsu / shiツ / シツ’s dashes sit on top (think of つ); シ’s dashes sit on the side (think of し)
u / waウ / ワウ has a small top stroke; ワ does not
nu / meヌ / メヌ has an extra stroke crossing through; メ is just the cross
ku / taク / タタ has an extra internal stroke; ク is simpler

💡 A memory trick for ツ vs シ: Look at the direction of the small strokes. In ツ (tsu), they point downward like the strokes of hiragana つ. In シ (shi), they sweep sideways/upward like hiragana し. Connecting each katakana to its hiragana partner makes the difference stick.


Katakana Contracted Sounds (拗音)

Just as in hiragana, contracted sounds in katakana are formed by combining a consonant character (from the い-column) with a small ャ, ュ, or ョ.

+ャ (ya)+ュ (yu)+ョ (yo)
kyキャ kyaキュ kyuキョ kyo
gyギャ gyaギュ gyuギョ gyo
shシャ shaシュ shuショ sho
jジャ jaジュ juジョ jo
chチャ chaチュ chuチョ cho
nyニャ nyaニュ nyuニョ nyo
hyヒャ hyaヒュ hyuヒョ hyo
byビャ byaビュ byuビョ byo
pyピャ pyaピュ pyuピョ pyo
myミャ myaミュ myuミョ myo
ryリャ ryaリュ ryuリョ ryo

💡 Extended katakana for foreign sounds: Because katakana must represent foreign words, it uses some combinations that don’t exist in hiragana — created to capture sounds Japanese doesn’t natively have:

  • ティ (ti) — パーティー (party)
  • ディ (di) — ディズニー (Disney)
  • ファ・フィ・フェ・フォ (fa/fi/fe/fo) — カフェ (café), フォーク (fork)
  • (vu) — ヴィオラ (viola)

You’ll encounter these often in loanwords. They follow the same small-kana logic you already know.

Summary

PointKey takeaway
PurposeForeign words, names, emphasis, onomatopoeia
SoundsIdentical to hiragana — only the shapes differ
Long vowelsWritten with the dash ー (not an extra vowel)
Contracted soundsConsonant + small ャ/ュ/ョ, same as hiragana
Watch out forソ/ン, ツ/シ, ヌ/メ — easily confused pairs

💡 Study tip: The best way to master katakana is through loanwords you already know. Practice reading menus (コーヒー, ケーキ, サラダ), brand names, and character names. Because you already know the meaning, you can focus entirely on recognizing the shapes — turning katakana practice into something genuinely fun.

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