Japanisches Hiragana Alphabet
-
かHiragana Brief Ka
-
きHiragana Brief Ki
-
くHiragana Brief Ku
-
けHiragana Brief Ke
-
こHiragana Brief Ko
-
さHiragana Brief Sa
-
しHiragana Brief Si
-
すHiragana Brief Su
-
せHiragana Brief Se
-
そHiragana Brief So
-
たHiragana-Buchstabe Ta
-
ちHiragana-Buchstabe Ti
-
つHiragana Brief Tu
-
てHiragana-Buchstabe Te
-
とHiragana Brief an
-
なHiragana Brief Na
-
にHiragana-Buchstabe Ni
-
ぬHiragana Brief Nu
-
ねHiragana Brief Ne
-
のHiragana Brief Nr
-
はHiragana Brief Ha
-
ひHiragana Brief Hallo
-
ふHiragana Brief Hu
-
へHiragana Brief He
-
ほHiragana Brief Ho
-
まHiragana Brief Ma
-
みHiragana Brief Mi
-
むHiragana Brief Mu
-
めHiragana Brief an mich
-
もHiragana Brief Mo
-
やHiragana-Buchstabe Ya
-
ゆHiragana Brief Yu
-
よHiragana Brief Yo
-
らHiragana Brief Ra
-
りHiragana Brief Ri
-
るHiragana Brief Ru
-
れHiragana Brief Re
-
ろHiragana Brief Ro
-
わHiragana Brief Wa
-
をHiragana Brief Wo
-
んHiragana Buchstabe N
-
がHiragana Brief Ga
-
ぎHiragana Brief Gi
-
ぐHiragana Brief Gu
-
げHiragana Brief Ge
-
ごHiragana Brief gehen
-
ざHiragana Brief Za
-
じHiragana Brief Zi
-
ずHiragana Brief Zu
-
ぜHiragana Brief Ze
-
ぞHiragana Brief Zo
-
だHiragana Brief Da
-
ぢHiragana Brief Di
-
づHiragana Brief Du
-
でHiragana Brief De
-
どHiragana Brief tun
-
ばHiragana Brief Ba
-
びHiragana Brief Bi
-
ぶHiragana Brief Bu
-
べHiragana Brief sein
-
ぼHiragana Brief Bo
-
ぱHiragana Brief Pa
-
ぴHiragana Letter Pi
-
ぷHiragana Brief Pu
-
ぺHiragana Brief Pe
-
ぽHiragana Brief Po
-
ゃHiragana Brief kleiner Ya
-
ゅHiragana Brief klein Yu
-
ょHiragana Brief kleines Yo
Beschreibung
Japanese has three writing systems. It's Kanji, which contains adapted Chinese characters, and two Japanese alphabets – syllabic hiragana and Katakana 30F3–30AA .
Initially, the writing came to the Japanese from China. There is no evidence to whether they wrote anything before the appearance of hieroglyphs (kanji).
The first Japanese writing system was called manyegana, which appeared in the V century. It used Chinese characters for the semantic meanings. The phonetic alphabets — hiragana and katakana — originated from manyegana.
Each hiragana character displays one mora (short syllable). It can be used to write vowel sounds, syllabic combinations and one consonant (N or h ん ). Together with hieroglyphs, it serves to denote various prefixes and suffixes. Speaking of informal communication, when the writer (or reader/receiver) doesn't know the necessary hieroglyph, this sign can be applied for verbs and adjectives.
Japanese fiction and newspapers contain text that goes from top to bottom and from right to left — the traditional way of writing. However, computers and scientific articles mainly follow the European style.
-
A
-
B
-
C
-
D
-
E
-
F
-
G
-
H
-
I
-
J
-
Japanisches Hiragana
-
Japanisches Katakana
-
Javanesisches
-
-
K
-
L
-
M
-
N
-
O
-
P
-
R
-
S
-
T
-
U
-
V
-
W
-
Y
-
Ä