Japanese Counters Deep Dive: Animals, Flat Things, Long Objects, and More

Japanese counters are one of the first big grammar challenges for learners. When you count objects in Japanese, you cannot just say “one, two, three” and stop — you have to attach a special suffix called a counter (助数詞, josusushi) to the number. And the counter changes depending on what you are counting.

The beginner list (本 for long things, 枚 for flat things, 匹 for small animals) is just the starting point. In real Japanese, counters get much more specific — and that is where it gets fascinating. This deep-dive guide covers the most important counter categories, their readings, and the sound changes you need to know.

CounterReadingUsed ForExample
本 (hon)ほん / ぼん / ぽんLong, cylindrical objects鉛筆一本 (enpitsu ippon) — 1 pencil
枚 (mai)まいFlat, thin objects紙一枚 (kami ichimai) — 1 sheet of paper
匹 (hiki)ひき / びき / ぴきSmall animals猫一匹 (neko ippiki) — 1 cat
頭 (tou)とうLarge animals馬一頭 (uma ittou) — 1 horse
羽 (wa)わ / ば / ぱBirds and rabbits鳥一羽 (tori ichiwa) — 1 bird
冊 (satsu)さつBound books本一冊 (hon issatsu) — 1 book
台 (dai)だいMachines, vehicles車一台 (kuruma ichidai) — 1 car
杯 (hai)はい / ばい / ぱいCups, bowls, glassesコーヒー一杯 (koohii ippai) — 1 cup of coffee
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Why Counters Change Sounds (Euphonic Changes)

One of the trickiest things about counters is that their pronunciation changes depending on the preceding number. This is called euphonic change (音便, onbin) — the sounds shift to make combinations easier to say.

The pattern is consistent: when 1 (いち), 6 (ろく), 8 (はち), or 10 (じゅう) combine with counters starting with h-, p-, or k-, the sounds often change. Here is a clear example with 本 (hon):

NumberCounter 本 (hon)ReadingSound Change
1一本いっぽん (ippon)hon → pon (h→p), ichi → ip
2二本にほん (nihon)No change
3三本さんぼん (sanbon)hon → bon
4四本よんほん (yonhon)No change
6六本ろっぽん (roppon)hon → pon, roku → rop
8八本はっぽん (happon)hon → pon, hachi → hap
10十本じゅっぽん (juppon)hon → pon, juu → jup

The key triggers: numbers 1, 6, 8, and 10 cause hardening (h → p or b, k → k with double consonant). Number 3 causes softening (h → b). All others are pronounced as-is.

Yuka

A memory trick: think of 1, 6, 8, 10 as the “hard numbers” — they tighten up the sounds that follow. And 3 softens things. Everything else flows naturally!

Animal Counters: 匹 vs 頭 vs 羽

Japanese has three main counters for animals, and which one you use depends on the size and type of the animal.

CounterUsed ForExamples
匹 (hiki)Small animals: fish, insects, cats, dogs (medium)犬二匹、金魚三匹、虫一匹
頭 (tou)Large animals: horses, cattle, elephants, whales馬一頭、牛二頭、ゾウ三頭
羽 (wa)Birds AND rabbits (historical reason: rabbits were counted like birds)鳥一羽、うさぎ二羽、ニワトリ三羽

The rabbit exception surprises many learners. In Japanese, rabbits (うさぎ) use 羽 — the bird counter — because historically in Japan, rabbits were categorized as birds (possibly to make them acceptable to eat during periods when Buddhist rules restricted meat). This is now simply a convention you need to memorize.

Counter sound changes for 匹 (hiki):

NumberReading
1匹いっぴき (ippiki)
2匹にひき (nihiki)
3匹さんびき (sanbiki)
6匹ろっぴき (roppiki)
8匹はっぴき (happiki)
10匹じゅっぴき (juppiki)

Flat, Long, and Bound Things

Three counters you will use constantly in daily life:

枚 (mai) — Flat, thin objects (no sound changes — use consistently)

ObjectJapanese
1 sheet of paper紙一枚 (kami ichimai)
3 stamps切手三枚 (kitte sanmai)
2 plates / dishesお皿二枚 (osara nimai)
1 T-shirtTシャツ一枚 (T-shatsu ichimai)

冊 (satsu) — Bound publications (books, notebooks, magazines)

NumberReading
1冊いっさつ (issatsu)
2冊にさつ (nisatsu)
3冊さんさつ (sansatsu)
10冊じゅっさつ (jussatsu)
Rei

The easy way to remember 枚: if you can lay it flat without it rolling away, it probably uses 枚. Paper, shirts, plates, slices of bread — all flat things!

Machines, Vehicles, and Drinks

台 (dai) — Machines and wheeled vehicles

ObjectJapanese
1 car車一台 (kuruma ichidai)
2 washing machines洗濯機二台 (sentakuki nidai)
3 bicycles自転車三台 (jitensha sandai)
1 pianoピアノ一台 (piano ichidai)

杯 (hai) — Liquid containers (cups, bowls, glasses)

NumberReading
1杯いっぱい (ippai)
2杯にはい (nihai)
3杯さんばい (sanbai)
6杯ろっぱい (roppai)

Note: いっぱい (ippai) — “1 cup” — is also a common expression meaning “full” or “a lot of.” Context will make the meaning clear.

The Universal Counter: つ (tsu) and 個 (ko)

When you are not sure which counter to use, or when counting abstract things, two fallback counters save you:

  • つ (tsu) — Native Japanese numbers 1-9: ひとつ、ふたつ、みっつ…ここのつ. Works for most small, general objects. Informal.
  • 個 (ko) — Small, compact objects (apples, eggs, boxes, rocks). More formal than つ and usable with Sino-Japanese numbers.
ObjectWith つWith 個 (ko)
1 appleりんごひとつりんご一個 (ikko)
2 eggs卵ふたつ卵二個 (niko)
3 boxes箱みっつ箱三個 (sanko)

Quick Quiz

  1. What counter do you use for books and notebooks?
    Answer: 冊 (satsu)
  2. How do you say “3 cats” using the correct counter?
    Answer: 猫三匹 (neko sanbiki)
  3. Why do rabbits use the bird counter 羽 in Japanese?
    Answer: Historical convention — rabbits were once classified with birds, possibly to allow eating them under Buddhist dietary rules.
  4. What is the reading of 六本 (6 pencils)?
    Answer: ろっぽん (roppon)
  5. Which counter would you use for “2 cars”?
    Answer: 台 (dai) — 車二台 (kuruma nidai)

Which counter do you always forget? Share in the comments — you are definitely not alone, and practicing with examples always helps!


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