Japanese Alphabet

Japanese Art


Free Japanese Lessons – #3

The 48 Hiragana syllables below are what most non-Japanese speaking people call the Japanese alphabet.

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a i u e o

ka ki ku ke ko

sa si/shi su se so

ta ti/chi tu/tsu te to

na ni nu ne no

ha hi hu/fu he(e) ho

ma mi mu me mo

ya yu yo

ra ri ru re ro

wa wo(o)

n

A Few Pointers:

1- You may have noticed that si is pronounced shi, ti is chi, tu is tsu (think of the ts in ‘hot soup’), hu is fu (the f is like an English f but without touching your teeth to your lips), he is often pronounced as e, and wo is often pronounced o.

2- In the Japanese language, if n is found before b, p or m, it is pronounced like an m. An example of this is kanpai, which is the equivalent of cheers when you raise your drinks. The n is before p, so kanpai is pronounced kampai.

3- The u is usually very weak at the end of syllables. For example, desu is pronounced des and masu is pronounced mas.

4- The famous Japanese r is a challenge for so many people. The r is nothing like the English r. If you can roll your tongue you’re in luck because the r is kind of like a supper duper short version of the rolled r. It might help you is to think of how you say the tt in butter. To me, it feels like I’m tapping my tongue on the same spot when I say butter and the Japanese r. If you just can’t say the Japanese r, it’s better to say it more like an English / rather than an English r.

Here’s a video of me, Soniei, trying to explain the evolution and inspiration behind my Japanese art.

This video includes a brief explanation of how I left the 9-5 work world to live my dream as a full-time artist.

Buy my Japanese art online!

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