What's new

Strange katakana dakuten combination

Serelonde

後輩
12 Mar 2015
24
1
13
I am trying to translate the writing on a piece of art and the writing is hand written. There appears to be the katakana character 'mi' being modified by a dakuten, followed by the katakana character 'to.' To my knowledge there is no modified 'mi' character, but i have also never heard of placeing a dakuten before the modified character, nor as a stand alone character
 
An image might help, or at least some better idea of what sort of art you're looking at (era, etc) and what the full context around those two characters is.
 
It is a digital illustration of a character profile. Age sometime in the past 5 years i would guess.
Using mobil at present, i can post an image when i get to my proper computer
 
mi.png the character by itself mi-to.png and the set of katakana in the line
 
for the record, I was agreeing with your realization you'd been reading it wrong, not that you're stupid. Good work
 
Back
Top Bottom