Here is a fact that surprises most people who start learning Japanese: you already know thousands of Japanese words.
Japanese has borrowed thousands of words from English, French, German, and other languages. These loanwords (外来語, gairaigo) are written in katakana and make up a huge part of everyday Japanese vocabulary — especially in technology, food, fashion, sports, and entertainment.
Once you know the rules for how English sounds map to Japanese katakana, you can instantly recognize and use a massive vocabulary.
| Category | Examples | Approximate Word Count |
|---|---|---|
| Technology | コンピュータ, スマホ, インターネット | 500+ |
| Food & Drink | コーヒー, ハンバーガー, アイスクリーム | 300+ |
| Sports | サッカー, バスケットボール, テニス | 100+ |
| Fashion | ジャケット, デニム, アクセサリー | 200+ |
| Business/Work | マーケティング, プレゼン, スケジュール | 200+ |
How English Sounds Change in Japanese Katakana
Japanese phonology works very differently from English. Understanding the key conversion rules will help you both read katakana words and predict how new ones will sound.
Rule 1: Consonant clusters are broken up with vowels
Japanese syllables are almost always consonant + vowel (or just a vowel). When English words have consonant clusters, Japanese inserts vowels to break them up.
| English | Katakana | Romaji | What Changed |
|---|---|---|---|
| strike | ストライク | sutoraiku | s + t split by u, final -e becomes u |
| bread | ブレッド | bureddo | br split, final -d doubled |
| Christmas | クリスマス | kurisumasu | Chr → ku-ri, -mas split |
Rule 2: The final “u” is added to words ending in consonants
| English | Katakana | Romaji |
|---|---|---|
| desk | デスク | desuku |
| milk | ミルク | miruku |
| drink | ドリンク | dorinku |
The trick is not to read katakana words as if they are English. Think of them as Japanese words that happen to sound similar to English. マクドナルド (Makudonarudo) is how Japanese speakers say “McDonald’s” — it has its own rhythm!
Sound Substitution Rules
Japanese does not have all the sounds that English does. Here are the most important substitutions:
| English Sound | Japanese Substitute | Example |
|---|---|---|
| L sound | ラ行 (ra, ri, ru, re, ro) | level → レベル (reberu) |
| V sound | バ行 (ba, bi, bu, be, bo) or ヴ | video → ビデオ (bideo) |
| th sound | サ行 or ズ | theme → テーマ (teema) |
| Final -r or -er | ー (long vowel) | computer → コンピュータ (konpyuuta) |
| Short vowel + r | Often dropped or lengthened | part → パート (paato) |
Technology and Daily Life Vocabulary
Technology katakana words are some of the most useful for learners because they appear everywhere in daily life — on signs, menus, apps, and in conversation.
| Katakana | Romaji | English |
|---|---|---|
| スマートフォン / スマホ | sumaato fon / sumaho | smartphone |
| パソコン | pasokon | personal computer (PC) |
| インターネット | intaanetto | internet |
| アプリ | apuri | app (application) |
| ダウンロード | daunroodo | download |
| アップロード | appuroodo | upload |
| メール | meeru | |
| パスワード | pasuwaado | password |
Food and Restaurant Vocabulary
Japanese menus are full of katakana loanwords. Knowing these will make ordering food in Japan much easier.
| Katakana | Romaji | English |
|---|---|---|
| コーヒー | koohii | coffee |
| ジュース | juusu | juice |
| ハンバーガー | hanbaagaa | hamburger |
| アイスクリーム | aisu kuriimu | ice cream |
| サンドイッチ | sandoicchi | sandwich |
| チョコレート | chokoreeto | chocolate |
| ケーキ | keeki | cake |
| チーズ | chiizu | cheese |


When I first visited Japan I was amazed that I could read most items on a family restaurant menu just from knowing katakana. Food words are one of the best places to start building your vocabulary!
False Friends — Katakana Words That Don’t Mean What You Think
Not all katakana words mean exactly what the English source suggests. These “false friends” can trip up learners:
| Katakana | What you might think | What it actually means |
|---|---|---|
| マンション (manshon) | Mansion (large house) | Apartment / condominium |
| スマート (sumaato) | Smart (intelligent) | Slim / slender in appearance |
| ナイーブ (naibu) | Naive (foolish) | Sensitive / easily hurt |
| ベテラン (beteran) | Veteran (military) | Experienced professional |
| クレーム (kureemu) | Claim | Complaint (customer complaint) |
| サービス (saabisu) | Service | Free of charge / complimentary |
Quick Quiz
- What does パソコン mean?
Answer: Personal computer (PC) - What English sound does the katakana ラ行 (ra-ri-ru-re-ro) substitute for?
Answer: The English L sound - What does マンション actually mean in Japanese (not English)?
Answer: An apartment or condominium (not a mansion) - How do you write “coffee” in katakana?
Answer: コーヒー (koohii) - Why does “strike” become ストライク (sutoraiku)?
Answer: The consonant cluster str- is broken up with vowels (su-to-ra) and the final -e becomes -ku.
Which katakana words were the most surprising for you? Share your discoveries in the comments!
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