Common Japanese Mistake: Particle Pronunciation in Connected Speech

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Particles Sound Different in Real Speech

When you learn Japanese particles in textbooks, you learn their spelling. But in natural spoken Japanese, some particles are pronounced differently from how they’re written. This surprises learners who learned to read before listening extensively.

The Three Irregular Particle Pronunciations

Particle (written)Pronounced asExample
は (topic marker)wa (not ha)わたし → watashi wa
へ (direction marker)e (not he)がっこう → gakkou e
を (object marker)o (not wo)ほん → hon o

These three particles are written with their historical spellings but pronounced differently in modern Japanese.

Common Mistake: Pronouncing は as “ha” When It’s the Topic Particle

は appears in two roles:

  • As a kana letter in a word: はな (hana = flower) → pronounced “ha”
  • As the topic particle: わたし → pronounced “wa”

Many beginners read は as “ha” even when it’s a particle. This is immediately noticeable to native speakers.

Connected Speech: Other Things That Change

PhenomenonWrittenNatural speech
です reduction〜ですよ〜っすよ (casual male speech)
の colloquial question〜のですか〜んですか or 〜の?
〜ている reductionたべているたべてる (drop い)
〜ておく reductionかっておくかっとく (collapse)
Short i/u vowelsです、ますdesu → “des”, masu → “mas” (whispered/devoiced)

Devoiced Vowels (す、き、し、ひ)

In standard Tokyo Japanese, short い and う in certain positions become devoiced (almost silent). Key examples:

  • です → “des” (the u is nearly silent)
  • ます → “mas”
  • すき → “s’ki” (the u is reduced)
  • きって → “k’tte” (the i is reduced)

This is why native speech sounds faster than you expect — some vowels are barely pronounced.

Quick Drill: What Is は?

Identify each は as a particle (pronounced “wa”) or letter (pronounced “ha”):

  1. 「わたし がくせいです。」
  2. な がきれいです。」
  3. 「きょう てんきが いいです。」

Answers: 1. particle → “wa” / 2. first mora of はな → “ha” / 3. particle → “wa”

Yuka Gets Particle Pronunciation Wrong

Mistakes feel embarrassing in the moment but they are the fastest way to learn. Watch how Yuka makes a natural error — and how Rei explains the rule clearly enough to prevent it from happening again.

Yuka

Rei, I know は is read ha, but my teacher said when it’s a particle it’s wa. And へ is e as a particle? Why??

Rei

Historical spelling! は as a particle descends from old Japanese where it was pronounced wa but written は. The writing froze in the Edo period while pronunciation changed. Same with へ (direction particle) = e, and を (object particle) = o, not wo.

Yuka

Are there any other particles with surprising pronunciation?

Rei

Those three are the main ones. は → wa (topic). へ → e (direction). を → o (object). Everything else is phonetically regular. Once you drill these three, particle pronunciation becomes automatic.

Yuka

Will Japanese people correct me if I pronounce は as ‘ha’ in a sentence?

Rei

They’ll usually understand but it sounds unnatural, like reading aloud without knowing silent letters in English. In real speech, わたしはがくせいです sounds like ‘watashi wa gakusei desu’ — the は is completely ‘wa.’ Drill it until wa is automatic when you see は as particle.

5 Correct Sentences — Read These Aloud

Each sentence demonstrates the correct usage from this article. Say them aloud to lock in the right pattern.

  1. わたし(wa)がくせいです。
    I am a student. (は = wa as topic particle)
  2. がっこう(e)いきます。
    I go to school. (へ = e as direction particle)
  3. りんご(o)たべます。
    I eat an apple. (を = o as object particle)
  4. きょうはいいてんきですね。
    It’s nice weather today, isn’t it? (は = wa)
  5. にほんへいきたいです。
    I want to go to Japan. (へ = e)

Your Turn! Correct the Mistake in the Comments

Here is a sentence with the error from this article. Can you fix it? Write the corrected version — and your own correct sentence — in the comments below.

Other learners will read your explanation, and teaching is one of the deepest forms of learning. Log in to keep your comment history and appear in the Top Commenters sidebar ranking!

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