A1

Hiragana

ひらがな

Hiragana in Japanese

Overview

Hiragana (ひらがな) is the first writing system you will learn in Japanese, and it forms the absolute foundation of reading and writing the language. It consists of 46 basic characters, each representing a single sound (mora). Unlike English letters, which can have multiple pronunciations, each hiragana character always represents the same sound, making pronunciation straightforward once you memorize them.

Hiragana is used for native Japanese words, grammatical elements like particles and verb endings, and words that do not have kanji or whose kanji is uncommon. As a CEFR A1 learner, mastering hiragana is your very first step -- without it, you cannot read any Japanese text naturally. Most beginner textbooks are written entirely in hiragana before introducing other scripts.

Beyond the 46 basic characters, hiragana includes voiced sounds (dakuten, marked with ゛) like が (ga) and ざ (za), semi-voiced sounds (handakuten, marked with ゜) like ぱ (pa), and combination sounds (youon) like きゃ (kya). Together these give you access to all the sounds in standard Japanese.

How It Works

The Basic 46 Characters

Hiragana is organized into a grid by consonant and vowel:

a i u e o
(vowel) あ (a) い (i) う (u) え (e) お (o)
k か (ka) き (ki) く (ku) け (ke) こ (ko)
s さ (sa) し (shi) す (su) せ (se) そ (so)
t た (ta) ち (chi) つ (tsu) て (te) と (to)
n な (na) に (ni) ぬ (nu) ね (ne) の (no)
h は (ha) ひ (hi) ふ (fu) へ (he) ほ (ho)
m ま (ma) み (mi) む (mu) め (me) も (mo)
y や (ya) ゆ (yu) よ (yo)
r ら (ra) り (ri) る (ru) れ (re) ろ (ro)
w わ (wa) を (wo)
ん (n)

Voiced Sounds (Dakuten ゛)

Adding two small strokes (゛) to certain consonants changes them:

Base Voiced
か (ka) → が (ga)
さ (sa) → ざ (za)
た (ta) → だ (da)
は (ha) → ば (ba)

Semi-Voiced Sounds (Handakuten ゜)

Adding a small circle (゜) to は-row creates p-sounds:

Base Semi-voiced
は (ha) → ぱ (pa)
ひ (hi) → ぴ (pi)
ふ (fu) → ぷ (pu)
へ (he) → ぺ (pe)
ほ (ho) → ぽ (po)

Combination Sounds (Youon)

A small や (ya), ゆ (yu), or よ (yo) after certain characters creates blended sounds:

Example Reading
きゃ kya
しゅ shu
ちょ cho
にゅ nyu

Special Rules

  • Long vowels: Written by adding the vowel character (おかあさん = okaasan, "mother")
  • Double consonants: Written with a small っ (sokuon) before the consonant (きって = kitte, "stamp")
  • Particle は: Pronounced "wa" when used as the topic particle
  • Particle へ: Pronounced "e" when used as the direction particle

Examples in Context

Japanese English Note
あ い う え お a i u e o The five vowels (a i u e o)
か き く け こ ka ki ku ke ko k-row characters
が ぎ ぐ げ ご ga gi gu ge go Voiced k-row (dakuten)
きゃ きゅ きょ kya kyu kyo Combination sounds (youon)
さくら cherry blossom (sakura) Common word using s-row
ありがとう thank you (arigatou) Essential polite phrase
おはよう good morning (ohayou) Casual greeting
すみません excuse me (sumimasen) Polite expression
たべます eat (tabemasu) Verb in polite form
わたし I/me (watashi) Personal pronoun

Common Mistakes

Confusing similar-looking characters

  • Wrong: Reading さ (sa) as き (ki)
  • Right: Notice さ has a horizontal stroke crossing, while き has two separate strokes
  • Why: Several hiragana pairs look similar. Practice writing them to internalize the differences: さ/き, は/ほ, ぬ/め, わ/ね/れ.

Forgetting voiced marks matter

  • Wrong: Writing か when you mean が
  • Right: Always check whether dakuten (゛) or handakuten (゜) is needed
  • Why: が (ga) and か (ka) are completely different sounds. Missing the voiced mark changes the word entirely.

Misreading particles

  • Wrong: Pronouncing は as "ha" in わたしはがくせいです
  • Right: Pronounce it as "wa" because it is the topic particle
  • Why: The particles は and へ have special pronunciations ("wa" and "e") that differ from their standard readings.

Writing small っ the wrong size

  • Wrong: Writing a full-size つ when you mean the double-consonant marker
  • Right: Write っ noticeably smaller than つ
  • Why: きて (kite, "come") and きって (kitte, "stamp/cut") are different words. The small っ signals a pause before the next consonant.

Practice Tips

  • Write by hand daily. Spend 15-20 minutes each day writing rows of hiragana. Physical writing builds muscle memory faster than flashcards alone. Start with the vowel row, then add one consonant row per day.

  • Read children's books and NHK Easy News. These sources use primarily hiragana (with furigana over any kanji), giving you real reading practice while reinforcing character recognition.

  • Use mnemonics for tricky characters. For example, き (ki) looks like a key, ぬ (nu) looks like noodles. Create your own visual associations to speed up memorization.

Related Concepts

  • Next steps: Katakana -- the second Japanese script, used for foreign words and emphasis

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