Alfabeto Hiragana Japonés
-
かLetra hiragana ka
-
きLetra hiragana ki
-
くLetra hiragana ku
-
けLetra hiragana ke
-
こLetra hiragana ko
-
さLetra hiragana sa
-
しLetra hiragana si
-
すLetra hiragana su
-
せLetra hiragana se
-
そLetra hiragana so
-
たLetra hiragana ta
-
ちLetra hiragana ti
-
つLetra hiragana tu
-
てLetra hiragana te
-
とLetra hiragana to
-
なLetra hiragana na
-
にLetra hiragana ni
-
ぬLetra hiragana nu
-
ねLetra hiragana ne
-
のLetra hiragana no
-
はLetra hiragana ha
-
ひLetra hiragana hi
-
ふLetra hiragana hu
-
へLetra hiragana he
-
ほLetra hiragana ho
-
まLetra hiragana ma
-
みLetra hiragana mi
-
むLetra hiragana mu
-
めLetra hiragana me
-
もLetra hiragana mo
-
やLetra hiragana ya
-
ゆLetra hiragana yu
-
よLetra hiragana yo
-
らLetra hiragana ra
-
りLetra hiragana ri
-
るLetra hiragana ru
-
れLetra hiragana re
-
ろLetra hiragana ro
-
わLetra hiragana wa
-
をLetra hiragana wo
-
んLetra hiragana n
-
がLetra hiragana ga
-
ぎLetra hiragana gi
-
ぐLetra hiragana gu
-
げLetra hiragana ge
-
ごLetra hiragana go
-
ざLetra hiragana za
-
じLetra hiragana zi
-
ずLetra hiragana zu
-
ぜLetra hiragana ze
-
ぞLetra hiragana zo
-
だLetra hiragana da
-
ぢLetra hiragana di
-
づLetra hiragana du
-
でLetra hiragana de
-
どLetra hiragana do
-
ばLetra hiragana ba
-
びLetra hiragana bi
-
ぶLetra hiragana bu
-
べLetra hiragana be
-
ぼLetra hiragana bo
-
ぱLetra hiragana pa
-
ぴLetra hiragana pi
-
ぷLetra hiragana pu
-
ぺLetra hiragana pe
-
ぽLetra hiragana po
-
ゃLetra hiragana pequeña ya
-
ゅLetra hiragana pequeña yu
-
ょLetra hiragana pequeña yo
Descripción
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
-
K
-
L
-
M
-
N
-
O
-
P
-
R
-
S
-
T
-
U
-
V
-
Y
-
Á