Tsu (kana) explained

Tsu
Hiragana Image:Japanese Hiragana kyokashotai TU.svg
Katakana Image:Japanese Katakana kyokashotai TU.svg
Transliteration:tsu, tu
Transliteration Dakuten:zu, dzu, du
Hiragana Manyogana:
Katakana Manyogana:
Other Manyogana:都 豆 通 追 川 津
Dakuten Manyogana:豆 頭 弩
Spelling:つるかめのツ
(Tsurukame no "tsu")
Morse:・--・
Unicode:U+3064, U+30C4
Flag1:12
Flag2:3

Tsu (hiragana: つ, katakana: ツ) is one of the Japanese kana, each of which represents one mora. Both are phonemically pronounced as //tɯ//, reflected in the Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki Romanization tu, although for phonological reasons, the actual pronunciation is pronounced as /ja/, reflected in the Hepburn romanization tsu.

The small kana っ/ッ, known as sokuon, are identical but somewhat smaller. They are mainly used to indicate consonant gemination and commonly used at the end of lines of dialogue in fictional works as a symbol for a glottal stop.

The dakuten forms づ, ヅ, pronounced the same as the dakuten forms of the su kana in most dialects (see yotsugana), are uncommon. They are primarily used for indicating a voiced consonant in the middle of a compound word (see rendaku), and they can never begin a word.

In the Ainu language, it can be written with a handakuten (which can be entered into a computer as either one character (ツ゚) or two combined characters (ツ゜) to represent the sound pronounced as /[tu͍]/, which is interchangeable with the katakana ト゚.

The katakana form has become popular as an emoticon in the Western world due to its resemblance to a smiling face and as part of a "shrug" emoticon, known alternatively as Shruggie, rendered as:  ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ .[1] [2]

FormsRōmajiHiraganaKatakana
Normal ts-
(た行 ta-gyō)
tsu
tsuu, tswu
tsū
つう, つぅ
つー
ツウ, ツゥ
ツー
Addition dakuten d/z-
(だ行 da-gyō)
zu
zuu, zwu
づう, づぅ
づー
ヅウ, ヅゥ
ヅー

Other communicative representations

つ / ツ in Japanese Braille
つ / ツ
tsu
づ / ヅ
zu/du
つう / ツー
tsū
づう / ヅー
/
Other kana based on Braille
ちゅ / チュ
chu
ぢゅ / ヂュ
ju/dyu
ちゅう / チュー
chū
ぢゅう / ヂュー
/dyū

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Shrug ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Emoji. emojipedia.org.
  2. Web site: The Best Way to Type ¯\_(ツ)_/¯. 2014-05-21. The Atlantic. 2019-06-17.