Pronunciation2026-06-13 · 5 min read

The Three Hardest Japanese Sounds: ふ, つ, and う

Most Japanese sounds give learners no trouble at all. Three do: , , and . Part of the problem is the romaji itself. Spelling them fu, tsu, and u points your mouth at the English sounds, which are close enough to fool you and wrong enough to give you an accent. Here’s what they really are.

JLPT N1 Certified Teacher
Japanese language teacher with experience teaching learners from Vietnam, Indonesia, and Mongolia.

ふ — Not an English F

English f presses your top teeth against your bottom lip. Japanese ふ never touches the teeth. Both lips come close together and you blow gently, the way you’d blow out a candle. Linguists call it a voiceless bilabial fricative [ɸ], but “soft puff between the lips” is all you need.

Try it on 富士山 (ふじさん). That ふ should sound closer to an English “h-w” blend than a hard “f”.

つ — The ts Cluster

つ fuses “t” and “s” into one sound [ts]. English speakers already make it, just at the end of words: “cats”, “boots”. What English almost never does is put it at the front, and that front position is the whole difficulty.

So borrow it from where you already have it. Say “boots”, hold the “ts” at the end, then stick う on it. A few words to drill once it clicks: 月 (つき), 机 (つくえ), 続く (つづく).

う — Unrounded

English “oo” in “food” rounds the lips and pushes them forward. Japanese う keeps them relaxed and flat, a compressed, unrounded [ɯ]. That tight little circle English speakers make is one of the first things that gives away a foreign accent.

Aim for the neutral lips of a quiet “uh”, just pulled higher and further back. This, plus the devoicing in the next article, is exactly why 好き comes out as “ski” and not “soo-kee”.

How to Practice

  • ふ: blow a candle, add voice. No teeth.
  • つ: borrow the “ts” from English “cats”, move it to the front.
  • う: keep lips flat and relaxed — never round them.
  • Record yourself and compare to native audio. These three sounds are where a tiny fix makes the biggest difference.

Teacher's Note

With these three, stop trusting the spelling. “Fu, tsu, u” are the nearest letters the alphabet could offer, not a set of instructions. Learn them by ear early and you’ll skip an accent that’s genuinely hard to undo once it sets in. I’ve watched plenty of advanced students still fighting a rounded う years later.

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