There are no equivalents to single consonants in Japanese, except for one corresponding to the sound of "N" at the middle or end of words, as in "manga", or "ramen".
The two non-kanji, phonetic writing systems, hiragana and katakana, are all made up of five vowels (a,e,i,o,u) and consonant+vowel combinations (ka, ke, ta, te, to, so, etc.).
The ones beginning with a "K" sound are "ka, ke, ki, ko, ku).
Kyoto
K. Sadamoto has written: 'Robots in the Japanese economy'
k. sato e famoso pittore
Kai 海
k.
i dont k now
J K. Jarvis has written: 'An historical outline of Japanese architecture'
Seeing as there is no character for 'k' in the Japanese language, I will assume you are talking about 'gyaku', which means reverse/opposite.
ミッキーマウス /mi-kkii ma u su/ is Japanese for 'Mickey Mouse'.[-kk = gemination on k]
K. N Lei has written: 'Information and opinion concerning the Japanese invasion of Manchuria and Shanghai, from sources other than Chinese' -- subject(s): Foreign relations, History, Japanese
Japanese last names that starts with letter "k" are: Katayama,Kanbara,Kato,Koyama,Kawaguchi,Komori,Kawamura,Kimura,koto,Kawa,Kayama,Kitagawa,Kitayama,Kisogawa,.
KenshiroKankuroKitty White (Hello Kitty's name)