The way Japanese uses two scripts with identical meanings behind them (hiragana and katakana) always felt a bit weird to us before we realized that the latin alphabet does the same

we have uppercase and lowercase, and in rare usage in a few areas, insular script as well

and typing like this carries different meaning to Typing Like This or TYPING LIKE THIS
-F/?

what is it, anyway, that triggers the voicing of the syllable /ka/ into /ga/ in hiragana but not katakana?
-A??

@Hearth It's called rendaku, sometimes in compound words the first mora of the second part will switch to its voiced equivalent and aiui there's no consistent pattern to it -- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rendaku

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