aiueo
k
s
t
n
h
m
y
r
w
also:
ndahd
c→ccv→vv
yōon/auo
iteration
µ

aiueo
ε
k
s
t
n
h
m
y
r
w
also:
ndahd
c→cc (sokuon)
yōon/auo
iteration
µ

Combining dakuten and handakuten are U+3099 and U+309A. The precomposed glyphs are far more common, however:
g: ガギグゲゴ がぎぐげご
z: ザジズゼゾ ざじずぜぞ
d: ダヂヅデド だぢづでど
b: バビブベボ ばびぶべぼ
p: パピプペポ ぱぴぷぺぽ

si is /shi/, ti is /chi/, tu is /tsu/, hu is /fu/. wi, we, wo commonly romanized as /i, e, o/. their voiced dakuten forms zi, di, du are /ji, ji, zu/.

/sha, shu, sho/ and /cha, chu, cho/ are produced with si + yōon and ti + yōon. Also applies to /ja, ju, jo/, which are produced with zi + yōon.

A dakuten-voiced h-column kana becomes /b/, and a handakuten-voiced h-column kana becomes /p/. This applies to the fu-kana as well, which becomes /bu/ or /pu/.

A handakuten on k-column kana can be used to represent [ŋ].

/va vi vu ve vo/ can be represented with u + dakuten + small aiueo. (Typically just a b-kana is used for this.) Pedantically, /l/ can be distinguished from /r/ with a dakuten on r-column kana. Precomposed vu: katakana U+30F4 ヴ hiragana U+3094 ゔ

 U+3000U+3001
U+3002U+300C
U+30FBU+300D
U+301CU+300E
U+2026U+300F

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