romaji. For example, arigato, arigatō and arigatou. Or kohai, kōhai, and kouhai. Or senpai and sempai. Or on'yomi and onyomi. Or "monster" being monsutaa, monsutā or left as literally monster in romaji. After all, what's the correct romaji for these words? Why does this even happen?


Which One Is Correct?

If you're wondering which one is correct, arigatou, arigatō, arigato or arigatoo, the answer is: all of them. And they are all pronounced the same way.

This is because all the romaji above refer to the same word: 有難う.

If 有難う is pronounced one way, and arigatō and arigatou are simply a different way of writing 有難う, then arigatō and arigatou must be pronounced the same way as 有難う. They are all pronounced the same.

But if they are all pronounced the same, why is the romaji different?

Why Romaji Varies

Basically, transliteration isn't an exact science. There's no official romanization for a given word. Because the romaji changes depending on the method applied to obtain that romaji.

For example, some methods are based simply on the letters. The same letters result in the same romaji. It's consistent that way. However, if two words written the same are pronounced differently in Japanese, that won't show in the romaji.

So there are also methods which attempt to transcribe how the word is pronounced. Here you already have a difference. A single word may be romanized based on how it's written or on how it's pronounced. And since you're just writing down the sounds you're hearing, two different people may end up romanizing the same word differently based on what they think it sounds like.

Why Romaji Doesn't Vary, Sorta

To make sure the romaji stays consistent from person to person, certain rules were created to romanize words. A set of such rules is called a

One romaji systems or another and their rules are used as reference pretty much every time a word needs to be romanized. That's why, most of the time, a single word Japanese word is only ever romanized in one way.

But then there are differences between the systems. There are even differences within a same system, because its rules were updated and some people still follow the old version.

And then new differences are born purely from the fact that some people are using a system but they don't know or can't be arsed to follow all of its rules, so they adopt some rules but skip over others, creating a romaji different from that of a person who followed all the romaji rules.

Below I'll list some of the common variations of romaji found in words and where they come from. I hope it serves as reference and answers the "why a single word has two romaji?" question.

English Words in Romaji

Sometimes, when the Japanese phrase contains a word that's a romaji.

One example of katakanization is found in the name of the Japanese game pokémon, which comes from English words:
  • poketto monsutaa ポケットモンスター
    Pocket monster.

But that isn't a really good example because the whole phrase is in English. A better example would be when it mixes loaned words and native words:
  • monsutaa musume モンスター娘
    Monster girl.

The term above combines monsutaa, the katakanization of the English word "monster," with
  • monster musume モンスター娘

The above happens even though, normally, the romaji of Japanese words never contains "st" or ends with "r." Likewise:
  • Tensei shitara Suraimu Datta Ken
    Tensei shitara Slime Datta Ken
    転生したらスライムだった件
    "The case [in which] after reincarnating [I] was a slime."

The Japanese language doesn't have an "L" consonant, so "slime" is katakanized to suraimu, with an R. But the romanization may feature the original English word: slime, which oddly does have an L and stands out like a sore thumb in the romanization.

Aa / ā / a

The romaji aa, ā, and a are for long vowels starting with a, like ああ and あー.

See the

Examples:

  • お母さん
    おかあさん
    おかーさん
    okaasan
    okāsan
    okasan
  • お祖母さん
    おばあさん
    おばーさん
    obaasan
    obāsan
    obasan
  • 麻雀
    マージャン
    maajan
    mājan
    majan

Ei / ē / e / ee

The romaji ei is for えい, which may be a long vowel.
The romaji ē, e, and ee are for long vowels starting with e, like えい, えー and ええ.

See the

Examples

  • お姉さん
    おねえさん
    おねーさん
    oneesan
    onēsan
    onesan
  • 先生
    せんせい
    sensei
    sensē
    sense
    sensee
  • ケーキ
    keeki
    kēki
    keki

Ii / ī / i

The romaji ii, ī, and i are for long vowels starting with i, like いい and いー.

See the

Examples

  • お兄さん
    おにいさん
    おにーさん
    oniisan
    onīsan
    onisan
  • ヒーロー
    hiiroo
    hī
    hiro

Ou / ō / o / oo

The romaji ou is for おう, which may be a long vowel.
The romaji ō, o, and oo are for long vowels starting with o, like おう, おー, and おお.

See the

Examples

  • 有難う
    ありがとう
    arigatou
    arigatō
    arigato
    arigatoo
  • 今日
    きょう
    kyou
    kyō
    kyo
    kyoo
  • ローマ字
    ローマじ
    roumaji
    rōmaji
    romaji
    roomaji

  • こおり
    koori
    kōri
    kori

  • いもうと
    imouto
    imōto
    imoto
    imooto

  • おとうと
    otouto
    otōto
    ototo
    otooto
  • お父さん
    おとうさん
    otousan
    otōsan
    otosan
    otoosan
  • 後輩
    こうはい
    kouhai
    kōhai
    kouhai
    koohai
  • 同人
    doujin
    dōjin
    dojin
    doojin
  • 東京
    とうきょう
    toukyou
    tōkyo
    tokyo
    tookyoo
  • 東方 仗助
    ひがしかた じょうすけ
    Higashikata Jousuke
    Higashikata Jōsuke
    Higashikata Josuke

Uu / ū / u

The romaji uu, ū, and u are for long vowels starting with u, like うう and うー.

See the

Examples

  • 九尾
    きゅうび
    kyuubi
    kyūbi
    kyubi
  • キュゥべえ
    kyuubee
    kyūbe
    kyube
    ("Kyubey," from Madoka Magica)
  • 十二大戦
    じゅうにたいせん
    juuni taisen
    jūni taisen
    juni taisen

N / m

In traditional n ん is romanized as m ん if it comes before a b, m, or p syllable.

Modified Hepburn, more recent, does not have this rule.

Examples

  • 先輩
    せんぱい
    senpai
    sempai
  • 貧乏
    びんぼう
    binbou
    bimbou
  • bin
  • bim
  • 段ボール
    だんボール
    danbooru
    dambooru
    danbōru
    dambōru
  • 乱麻½
    らんま½
    ranma 1/2
    ramma 1/2

N / n- / n' /

In n ん is romanized n ん. However, to make sure n ん + a あ, two syllables, wouldn't look like a single na な syllable, the n ん is romanized differently if it comes before a vowel or an y-syllable.

In traditional Hepburn, it becomes n-, with a dash. In modified Hepburn, it becomes n', with an apostrophe.

Because not everybody is aware of this rule, people may end up transliterating kon'ya or kon-ya 今夜 as konya 今夜 instead, which looks like ko-nya こにゃ even though it is ko-n-ya こんや.

In JSL, it's always romanized ん with a macron, because they didn't want to deal with these shenanigans.

Examples

  • 戦勇
    せんゆう
    sen'yuu
    sen-yuu

    senyuu
    seyuu
    sen'
    sen-
    sen
    se

Hyphens

Sometimes are added to nouns, and when romanized they're separated by a hyphen. Sometimes, they are not separated by a hyphen.

Likewise, other suffixes in general like pluralizing suffixes, etc. can get treated with the hyphen or lack of thereof.

Furthermore, in some cases the suffix is a noun, so it becomes hard to figure out if it's a noun plus suffix or an adjective-noun plus noun. In such cases, an hyphenated version and a space-separated version end up existing.

Nobody is really sure when to put the hyphen.

Examples

  • お母さん
    おかあさん
    okaasan
    okaa-san
  • 僕達
    ぼくたち
    bokutachi
    boku-tachi
  • 六本木駅
    ろっぽんぎえき
    roppongi-eki
    roppongi eki

Ha / wa, he / e, wo / o

The kana ha-he-wo はへを are sometimes romanized as wa-e-o はへを.

This only happens when the kana represents a grammar particle. For example:
  • haha wa hantaa はは は はんたー
    Mother is a hunter.
  • henshin e no enerugii へんしん へ の エネルギー
    The energy [used] toward the transformation.

And it only happens with the particles because the particles are pronounced differently like that. And the reason for that has been explained in another post:

Fu / Hu

In the romaji system, it's romanized fu ふ. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki, the romanization is hu ふ.

Examples

  • 風船
    ふうせん
    fuusen
    huusen
    fūsen
    hūsen

Sho / Syo

In romaji systems, sho しょis romanized as sho, mimicking the pronunciation.

In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki systems, sho しょ is romanized as syo, because those systems prefer to be regular (kyo, myo, syo instead of sho).

Examples

  • 少年
    しょうねん
    shounen
    shōnen
    syounen
    syōnen
  • 少女
    しょうじょ
    shoujo
    syouzyo
    shōjo
    syōzyo

Chi / Ti

In chi ち, in Nihon and Kunrei-shiki, it's romanized ti ち.

Examples

  • 地球
    ちきゅう
    chikyuu
    tikyuu
    chikyū
    tikyū

Long Vowels

A common way in which romaji varies is in how a

In Japanese, a long vowel happens when the vowel part of a syllable takes longer than one mora of time to pronounce.

To elaborate:
  • ko
    One syllable. One mora.
  • koe こえ
    Two syllables. Two mora.
  • koo こー
    One syllable. Two mora.
  • koo こお
    One syllable. Two mora.

Basically, instead of pronouncing ko and o separately, the sound of the first syllable is dragged for a bit longer.

The long vowels don't only happen when you have the same vowel repeated. For example, ou おう may be pronounced as a long o. And ei えい may be pronounced as a long e.

Compound kana may have long vowels too. For example: kyuu きゅう is a kyu ending in a long u.

Generally speaking, (there are some exceptions), long vowels only happen within morpheme boundaries. This means that meiro 迷路, "labyrinth," has a me with a long e, because mei 迷 is a single morpheme. However, meiro 目色, "eye color," is pronounced differently, with me 目, "eye," and iro 色, "color," pronounced separately.

Ignore It

The most simple approach to transliterating long vowels is to just ignore them.

So o お and u う is always ou おう, no matter what it's pronounced like.

Macrons

A common approach to transliterating long vowels is to add a macron to the long vowel and remove the extra vowel. For example:
  • gakkou 学校
    gakkō
    School.

Forget The Macron

Most people don't know how to type a macaroon, much less a macaroni, or a macron. So if they see kyōto written somewhere, they might try to copy it, but they won't be able to type the macron, and type it just as Kyoto.
  • kyouto 京都
    kyōto
    Kyoto.

Doubled Vowels

Another approach (used by the JSL romaji system, for example), is to double the long vowel, but remove the second vowel. It's like doing the macron, but removing the macron and repeating the vowel. Example:
  • kouhai 後輩
    kōhai (add macron, remove u)
    kohai (forget the macron)
    koohai (double the vowel)

Discrepancies

It's interesting to note that the approaches toward long vowels vary from system to system.

For example, modified Hepburn says you can't macronize sensei 先生, even though it's a long vowel. Hepburn doesn't macronize ei えい syllables. It only macaronizes ē えー syllables, written with a

However, the book sensē 先生 should be macaronized... except it doesn't macaronize stuff. Instead, it uses double vowels. So, in the book, it's romanized sensee 先生, with a doubled e.

Every now and then you see a single same word with multiple, different. For example,and. Or, and. Orand. Orand. Or "monster" beingor left as literallyin. After all, what's the correctfor these words? Why does this even happen?If you're wondering which one is correct,or, the answer is: all of them. And they are allThis is because all theabove refer to the same word: 有難う.If 有難う is pronounced one way, andandare simply a different way of writing 有難う, thenandmust be pronounced the same way as 有難う. They are all pronounced the same.But if they are all pronounced the same, why is thedifferent?Basically, transliteration isn't an exact science. There's no official romanization for a given word. Because thechanges depending on the method applied to obtain thatFor example, some methods are based simply on the letters. The same letters result in the same. It's consistent that way. However, if two words written the same are pronounced differently in Japanese, that won't show in theSo there are also methods which attempt to transcribe how the word is pronounced. Here you already have a difference. A single word may be romanized based on how it's written or on how it's pronounced. And since you're just writing down the sounds you're hearing, two different people may end up romanizing the same word differently based on what they think it sounds like.To make sure thestays consistent from person to person, certain rules were created to romanize words. A set of such rules is called a romaji system Onesystems or another and their rules are used as reference pretty much every time a word needs to be romanized. That's why, most of the time, a single word Japanese word is only ever romanized in one way.But then there are differences between the systems. There are even differences within a same system, because its rules were updated and some people still follow the old version.And then new differences are born purely from the fact that some people are using a system but they don't know or can't be arsed to follow all of its rules, so they adopt some rules but skip over others, creating adifferent from that of a person who followed all therules.Below I'll list some of the common variations offound in words and where they come from. I hope it serves as reference and answers the "why a single word has two?" question.Sometimes, when the Japanese phrase contains a word that's a katakanization , that is, a loaned word that's normally written with katakana , the original English word that the katakanization is based on might get written in theOne example of katakanization is found in the name of the Japanese game pokémon, which comes from English words:But that isn't a really good example because the whole phrase is in English. A better example would be when it mixes loaned words and native words:The term above combines, the katakanization of the English word "monster," with musume , a Japanese word that can mean "daughter" or "girl." The term can also be romanized as:The above happens even though, normally, theof Japanese words never contains "st" or ends with "r." Likewise:The Japanese language doesn't have an "L" consonant, so "slime" is katakanized to, with an R. But the romanization may feature the original English word: slime, which oddly does have an L and stands out like a sore thumb in the romanization.The, andare for long vowels starting with, like ああ and あー.See the Long Vowels section below for explanation.Theis for えい, which may be a long vowel.The, andare for long vowels starting with, like えい, えー and ええ.See the Long Vowels section below for explanation.The, andare for long vowels starting with, like いい and いー.See the Long Vowels section below for explanation.Theis for おう, which may be a long vowel.The, andare for long vowels starting with, like おう, おー, and おお.See the Long Vowels section below for explanation.The, andare for long vowels starting with, like うう and うー.See the Long Vowels section below for explanation.In traditional Hepburn ん is romanized asん if it comes before a, orsyllable.Modified Hepburn, more recent, does not have this rule.In Hepburn , the syllabicん is romanizedん. However, to make sureん +あ, two syllables, wouldn't look like a singleな syllable, theん is romanized differently if it comes before a vowel or an-syllable.In traditional Hepburn, it becomes, with a dash. In modified Hepburn, it becomes, with an apostrophe.Because not everybody is aware of this rule, people may end up transliteratingor今夜 as今夜 instead, which looks likeこにゃ even though it isこんや.In JSL, it's always romanizedん with a macron, because they didn't want to deal with these shenanigans.Sometimes honorific suffixes like sama, san, and are added to nouns, and when romanized they're separated by a hyphen. Sometimes, they are not separated by a hyphen.Likewise, other suffixes in general like pluralizing suffixes, etc. can get treated with the hyphen or lack of thereof.Furthermore, in some cases the suffix is a noun, so it becomes hard to figure out if it's a noun plus suffix or an adjective-noun plus noun. In such cases, an hyphenated version and a space-separated version end up existing.Nobody is really sure when to put the hyphen.Theはへを are sometimes romanized asはへを.This only happens when the kana represents a grammar particle. For example:And it only happens with the particles because the particles are pronounced differently like that. And the reason for that has been explained in another post: Why is hawa? In the Hepburn system, it's romanizedふ. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki, the romanization isふ.In Hepburn and similarsystems,しょis romanized as, mimicking the pronunciation.In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki systems,しょ is romanized as, because those systems prefer to be regular (instead of).In Hepburn , it'sち, in Nihon and Kunrei-shiki, it's romanizedち.A common way in whichvaries is in how a romaji system transliterates long vowels.In Japanese, a long vowel happens when the vowel part of a syllable takes longer than one mora of time to pronounce.To elaborate:Basically, instead of pronouncingandseparately, the sound of the first syllable is dragged for a bit longer.The long vowels don't only happen when you have the same vowel repeated. For example,おう may be pronounced as a long. Andえい may be pronounced as a longCompound kana may have long vowels too. For example:きゅう is aending in a longGenerally speaking, (there are some exceptions), long vowels only happen within morpheme boundaries. This means that迷路, "labyrinth," has awith a long, because迷 is a single morpheme. However,目色, "eye color," is pronounced differently, with目, "eye," and色, "color," pronounced separately.The most simple approach to transliterating long vowels is to just ignore them.Soお andう is alwaysおう, no matter what it's pronounced like.A common approach to transliterating long vowels is to add a macron to the long vowel and remove the extra vowel. For example:Most people don't know how to type a macaroon, much less a macaroni, or a macron. So if they seewritten somewhere, they might try to copy it, but they won't be able to type the macron, and type it just asAnother approach (used by the JSLsystem, for example), is to double the long vowel, but remove the second vowel. It's like doing the macron, but removing the macron and repeating the vowel. Example:It's interesting to note that the approaches toward long vowels vary from system to system.For example, modified Hepburn says you can't macronize先生, even though it's a long vowel. Hepburn doesn't macronizeえい syllables. It only macaronizesえー syllables, written with a prolonged sound mark ー However, the book Genki does think先生 should be macaronized... except it doesn't macaronize stuff. Instead, it uses double vowels. So, in the book, it's romanized先生, with a doubled

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