![]() ![]() The sheets above helped me memorise the 2 most basic alphabets. Also, as you start to study more, you’ll see these characters written everywhere in textbooks, so it makes it a little easier to remember how to write them and the reading. There are 46 characters to learn which sounds like a lot but a quite a few of them are very similar (か and が for example). I did this by using a repetition method by using these practice sheets: ![]() These have the same sounds as hiragana, just a different way of writing them (to help identify it as a foreign-imported word).īefore moving to Japan, I had spent about 2–3 months studying hiragana and katakana alongside a full-time job. A lot of these are from English, but some of them aren’t. Katakana is used for foreign words that have been imported into Japanese from elsewhere. These sounds make up the basis of all pronunciation in Japanese so once you’ve mastered these sounds, you should be able to pronounce any Japanese word correctly. Each of these characters has its own sound and it doesn’t often change. Hiragana is mostly used for grammar points and connecting words, known as particles. ![]()
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