Lesson 1
Hiragana and Katakana
Hello everyone. In this lesson, you will be learning two of the three writing systems in Japanese: Hiragana and Katakana. Each character in these syllabaries (yes, syllabaries, not alphabets) consists of forty-six different characters, each representing one sound. Small lines, however, can be added next to some characters to create a different sound. For example, the Hiragana character か is pronounced "ka," but when two lines are added near it, like this (が) it becomes "ga."
See?
Ka
か
Ga
が
Generally, Hiragana is used in writing words native to the Japanese language, while Katakana is used in writing loan words from other languages and foreign names.
Anyways, let's get to the charts.
Hiragana:

Katakana:

Believe it or not, there is actually a certain way, or stroke order, that you are supposed to write the Hiragana and Katakana in. The proper stroke order can be found here:
Hiragana: Click Here
Katakana: Click Here
Please, do NOT try to write these in your own way! It is ESSENTIAL that you know the proper stroke order or your characters will not look right.
Okay, there you have it. But remember what I said about using those lines to change the sound? I'll explain that to you real quick with this diagram:
When lines are added:
K --> G
S --> Z
T --> D
H --> B
F --> B
Shi --> Ji
You can also put a small circle in place of the two lines to turn an H sound into a P sound.
Characters can also be combined by writing a small character beginning with Y after character ending with I. These may be used in both writing systems. Here are the possible combinations:
にゃ - Nya
にゅ - Nyu
にょ - Nyo
ちゃ - Cha
ちゅ - Chu
ちょ - Cho
しゃ - Sha
しゅ - Shu
しょ - Sho
じゃ - Ja
じゅ - Ju
じょ - Jo
きゃ - Kya
きゅ - Kyu
きょ - Kyo
ぎゃ - Gya
ぎゅ - Gyu
ぎょ - Gyo
りゃ - Rya
りゅ - Ryu
りょ - Ryo
みゃ - Mya
みゅ - Myu
みょ - Myo
ひゃ - Hya
ひゅ - Hyu
ひょ - Hyo
びゃ - Bya
びゅ - Byu
びょ - Byo
ぴゃ - Pya
ぴゅ - Pyu
ぴょ - Pyo
And here are some more sounds that can be made, but they MUST be written in Katakana:
シェ - She (Prounounced Shehh, not Shee)
ジェ - Je
ティ - Ti
トゥ - Tu
ディ - Di
ドゥ - Du
チェ - Che
ファ - Fa
フィ - Fi
フェ - Fe
フォ - Fo
ウィ - Wi
ウェ - We
ウォ - Wo (ヲ isn't really used)
ヴァ - Va
ヴィ - Vi
ヴ - Vu (Just a ウ with two lines over it)
ヴェ - Ve
ヴォ - Vo
A couple of other characters:
In Japanese writing, you may also sometimes see a ー in between or after a Katakana character. That simply means to hold the vowel sound for twice as long. For example:
ハハ - Haha
ハーハー - Haahaa
Some words using these lines include:
ラーメン - Raamen - Ramen
テーブル - Teeburu - Table
インターネットー - Intaanettoo - Internet
Easy enough, right?
The second character you will see is a small "tsu" in between some characters. This just means to hold the consonant twice as long, or put a
short pause before the next syllable. Some words using this are:
やった - Yatta - I did it!
いらっしゃい - Irasshai - Welcome!
がっこう - Gakkou - School
Okay, so, let's start writing some Japanese words:
Let's start with some words that can be written in Hiragana (Although many of them are usually written in Kanji, which are those fancy, complicated
symbols that you'll see a lot):
りんご - Ringo - Apple
もも - Momo - Peach
にく - Niku - Meat
うし - Ushi - Cow
わたし - Watashi - I/me
あなた - You
かれ - Him/Boyfriend
かのじょ - Her/Girlfriend
わたしたち - Watashitachi - We
あなたたち - Anatatachi - They
にほん - Nihon - Japan
にほんご - Nihongo - Japanese language (The Kanji for this is in the thread title)
はい - Hai - Yes
いいえ - Iie - No
しっぱいする - Shippai suru - To fail
Now for some words that can be written in Katakana:
アメリカ - Amerika - America
カメラ - Kamera - Camera
テーブル - Teeburu - Table (This is pronounced like Tay, not Tee)
ガイア - Gaia - Gaia
パイ - Pai - Pie
タコス - Takosu - Taco
クッキ - Kukki - Cookie
マンガ - Manga
アニメ - Anime
Now, for your homework:
In a PM, copy and paste this part, fill in your answers, and send them to me.
Write out the following words in English letters:
はじめまして
ようこそ
あつい
さむい
あかい
あおい
くろい
しろい
すき
だいすき
あいしてる
おどって
みっか
ホテル
コラ
ナルト
クラウド
ドル
テレビ
ラーメン
コーヒー
サンドイッチ
Things you can use to practice:
Hiragana Drag-n-Drop Exercise
The Really ******** Annoying Hiragana Song
Hiragana Game
Katakana Game
Hiragana and Katakana
Hello everyone. In this lesson, you will be learning two of the three writing systems in Japanese: Hiragana and Katakana. Each character in these syllabaries (yes, syllabaries, not alphabets) consists of forty-six different characters, each representing one sound. Small lines, however, can be added next to some characters to create a different sound. For example, the Hiragana character か is pronounced "ka," but when two lines are added near it, like this (が) it becomes "ga."
See?
Ka
か
Ga
が
Generally, Hiragana is used in writing words native to the Japanese language, while Katakana is used in writing loan words from other languages and foreign names.
Anyways, let's get to the charts.
Hiragana:

Katakana:

Believe it or not, there is actually a certain way, or stroke order, that you are supposed to write the Hiragana and Katakana in. The proper stroke order can be found here:
Hiragana: Click Here
Katakana: Click Here
Please, do NOT try to write these in your own way! It is ESSENTIAL that you know the proper stroke order or your characters will not look right.
Okay, there you have it. But remember what I said about using those lines to change the sound? I'll explain that to you real quick with this diagram:
When lines are added:
K --> G
S --> Z
T --> D
H --> B
F --> B
Shi --> Ji
You can also put a small circle in place of the two lines to turn an H sound into a P sound.
Characters can also be combined by writing a small character beginning with Y after character ending with I. These may be used in both writing systems. Here are the possible combinations:
にゃ - Nya
にゅ - Nyu
にょ - Nyo
ちゃ - Cha
ちゅ - Chu
ちょ - Cho
しゃ - Sha
しゅ - Shu
しょ - Sho
じゃ - Ja
じゅ - Ju
じょ - Jo
きゃ - Kya
きゅ - Kyu
きょ - Kyo
ぎゃ - Gya
ぎゅ - Gyu
ぎょ - Gyo
りゃ - Rya
りゅ - Ryu
りょ - Ryo
みゃ - Mya
みゅ - Myu
みょ - Myo
ひゃ - Hya
ひゅ - Hyu
ひょ - Hyo
びゃ - Bya
びゅ - Byu
びょ - Byo
ぴゃ - Pya
ぴゅ - Pyu
ぴょ - Pyo
And here are some more sounds that can be made, but they MUST be written in Katakana:
シェ - She (Prounounced Shehh, not Shee)
ジェ - Je
ティ - Ti
トゥ - Tu
ディ - Di
ドゥ - Du
チェ - Che
ファ - Fa
フィ - Fi
フェ - Fe
フォ - Fo
ウィ - Wi
ウェ - We
ウォ - Wo (ヲ isn't really used)
ヴァ - Va
ヴィ - Vi
ヴ - Vu (Just a ウ with two lines over it)
ヴェ - Ve
ヴォ - Vo
A couple of other characters:
In Japanese writing, you may also sometimes see a ー in between or after a Katakana character. That simply means to hold the vowel sound for twice as long. For example:
ハハ - Haha
ハーハー - Haahaa
Some words using these lines include:
ラーメン - Raamen - Ramen
テーブル - Teeburu - Table
インターネットー - Intaanettoo - Internet
Easy enough, right?
The second character you will see is a small "tsu" in between some characters. This just means to hold the consonant twice as long, or put a
short pause before the next syllable. Some words using this are:
やった - Yatta - I did it!
いらっしゃい - Irasshai - Welcome!
がっこう - Gakkou - School
Okay, so, let's start writing some Japanese words:
Let's start with some words that can be written in Hiragana (Although many of them are usually written in Kanji, which are those fancy, complicated
symbols that you'll see a lot):
りんご - Ringo - Apple
もも - Momo - Peach
にく - Niku - Meat
うし - Ushi - Cow
わたし - Watashi - I/me
あなた - You
かれ - Him/Boyfriend
かのじょ - Her/Girlfriend
わたしたち - Watashitachi - We
あなたたち - Anatatachi - They
にほん - Nihon - Japan
にほんご - Nihongo - Japanese language (The Kanji for this is in the thread title)
はい - Hai - Yes
いいえ - Iie - No
しっぱいする - Shippai suru - To fail
Now for some words that can be written in Katakana:
アメリカ - Amerika - America
カメラ - Kamera - Camera
テーブル - Teeburu - Table (This is pronounced like Tay, not Tee)
ガイア - Gaia - Gaia
パイ - Pai - Pie
タコス - Takosu - Taco
クッキ - Kukki - Cookie
マンガ - Manga
アニメ - Anime
Now, for your homework:
In a PM, copy and paste this part, fill in your answers, and send them to me.
Write out the following words in English letters:
はじめまして
ようこそ
あつい
さむい
あかい
あおい
くろい
しろい
すき
だいすき
あいしてる
おどって
みっか
ホテル
コラ
ナルト
クラウド
ドル
テレビ
ラーメン
コーヒー
サンドイッチ
Things you can use to practice:
Hiragana Drag-n-Drop Exercise
The Really ******** Annoying Hiragana Song
Hiragana Game
Katakana Game