Alphabet Japonais de katakana
-
ンSyllabe katakana n
-
ワSyllabe katakana wa
-
ラSyllabe katakana ra
-
ヤSyllabe katakana ya
-
マSyllabe katakana ma
-
ハSyllabe katakana ha
-
ナSyllabe katakana na
-
タSyllabe katakana ta
-
サSyllabe katakana sa
-
カSyllabe katakana ka
-
アSyllabe katakana a
-
リSyllabe katakana ri
-
ミSyllabe katakana mi
-
ヒSyllabe katakana hi
-
ニSyllabe katakana ni
-
チSyllabe katakana ti
-
シSyllabe katakana si
-
キSyllabe katakana ki
-
イSyllabe katakana i
-
ルSyllabe katakana ru
-
ユSyllabe katakana yu
-
ムSyllabe katakana mu
-
フSyllabe katakana hu
-
ヌSyllabe katakana nu
-
ツSyllabe katakana tu
-
スSyllabe katakana su
-
クSyllabe katakana ku
-
ウSyllabe katakana u
-
レSyllabe katakana re
-
メSyllabe katakana me
-
ヘSyllabe katakana he
-
ネSyllabe katakana ne
-
テSyllabe katakana te
-
セSyllabe katakana se
-
ケSyllabe katakana ke
-
エSyllabe katakana e
-
ヲSyllabe katakana wo
-
ロSyllabe katakana ro
-
ヨSyllabe katakana yo
-
モSyllabe katakana mo
-
ホSyllabe katakana ho
-
ノSyllabe katakana no
-
トSyllabe katakana to
-
ソSyllabe katakana so
-
コSyllabe katakana ko
-
オSyllabe katakana o
Description
To write Japanese, three letter systems are used. Kanji — adapted Chinese characters and two Japanese syllabic alphabets — Hiragana 304B–3087 and katakana.
Initially, writing to the Japanese came from China. There is no evidence that before the appearance of the hieroglyphs (kanji) they recorded their language. The first Japanese system of writing was a manjogan. Appeared in the V century. It used Chinese characters, but not their semantic values, but phonetic sounds. From maneyogany phonetic alphabets — hiragana and katakana occurred.
Katakana
The Japanese alphabet — katakana was created by Tibetan monks, approximately, in the IX century. The symbols were used as phonetic clues in the kamboon. Kambun is an early form of adaptation of Chinese characters containing diacritical marks that indicate a sequence of hieroglyphs for reading in Japanese. Now with the help of katakana foreign words, names, names, scientific and technical terms are written down.
In Japanese fiction and newspapers, the text goes from top to bottom and from right to left. In computers and scientific and technical articles, basically, the European way of writing is used.
-
A
-
B
-
C
-
D
-
E
-
F
-
G
-
H
-
I
-
J
-
Japonais de katakana
-
Japonais en hiragana
-
Javanais
-
-
K
-
L
-
M
-
N
-
O
-
P
-
R
-
S
-
T
-
U
-
V
-
Y
-
m