Definition:
Dakuten (濁点, literally “voiced mark”) are the two small diagonal dots (゛) placed at the upper-right corner of certain Japanese kana to indicate that the consonant is voiced. Adding dakuten to か (ka) produces が (ga), to さ (sa) produces ざ (za), and so on. Dakuten apply to the same consonant rows in both hiragana and katakana.
In-Depth Explanation
Consonant rows that take dakuten:
| Row | Unvoiced | + Dakuten (Voiced) |
|---|---|---|
| K-row | か き く け こ (ka ki ku ke ko) | が ぎ ぐ げ ご (ga gi gu ge go) |
| S-row | さ し す せ そ (sa shi su se so) | ざ じ ず ぜ ぞ (za ji zu ze zo) |
| T-row | た ち つ て と (ta chi tsu te to) | だ ぢ づ で ど (da (d)ji (d)zu de do) |
| H-row | は ひ ふ へ ほ (ha hi fu he ho) | ば び ぶ べ ぼ (ba bi bu be bo) |
What “voicing” means phonetically:
Voicing refers to vibration of the vocal cords during consonant production. When you say “ka,” the /k/ is produced without vocal cord vibration (voiceless). When you say “ga,” the /g/ is produced with vibration (voiced). Dakuten marks this transition in writing.
The H-row is a special case: the H-row consonant /h/ becomes /b/ with dakuten — a more dramatic change than the others, reflecting a historical sound change in Japanese where /p/ → /ɸ/ → /h/ over centuries. Adding dakuten brings back a stop consonant (/b/), and adding handakuten (the small circle) brings back /p/.
Katakana uses the same system:
- カ (ka) → ガ (ga)
- サ (sa) → ザ (za)
- タ (ta) → ダ (da)
- ハ (ha) → バ (ba)
Notes for T-row dakuten:
- ぢ (di/ji) and づ (du/zu) are largely replaced by じ (ji) and ず (zu) in modern Japanese. They survive in limited contexts, such as compound words where rendaku (sequential voicing) applies: 鼻血 (hanaji → hanaDI, nosebleed), 続く (tsuDUku, to continue).
Related Terms
See Also
Research
- Labrune, L. (2012). The Phonology of Japanese. Oxford University Press. — Covers the phonological basis for voicing distinctions and the historical development of the H-row.
- Vance, T. J. (2008). The Sounds of Japanese. Cambridge University Press. — Accessible phonetic description of voiced and voiceless consonants in Japanese.