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Japanese class.... help!??!?!?!?!?!?

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i need help i can't tell apart hiragana letters from katakana letters from kanji letters.. can i get some help please its a homework assignment..

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  1. wow - um the way i remembered it in japanese school was that hiragana letters are more Curvy. Like A - One cross and 'no.' But katakana is more angular. Like E - 90 deg angles.


  2. I can't exactly help you, but if you have a scanner, I'd recommend that you scan some letters you need justification in and add the picture to this question. That will give people a better idea of how to help you.

  3. I can help you but I'll need a little more information.  What is the assignment exactly?  Do you have to write actual sentences or just differentiate between different characters?

  4. Ok, for starters, the main way to differentiate between the three is this:

    Katakana is very sharp and has sharp, line strokes and there are few strokes. Example: カタカナ。 ヨメマスカ?

    Hiragana has few strokes but they are more loopy, and are not as sharp as katakana. Example: ひらがな。よめますか?

    Kanji symbols are generally very complex with many strokes. Example: 漢字。友達。金曜日。However, you can have some kanji with few strokes similar to hiragana. Example (these are all kanji with few strokes): 人、水、目、日、口、可、下、上.

    Apart from that, learn hiragana, learn katakana, and the left overs are kanji!

    Your name would only be written in KATAKANA only. Katakana is a script used for borrowed words.

    Examples

    basketball - バスケットボールbasukettobooru

    pen - ペンpen

    tekisuto - テキストtekisuto

    These are the main differentiation techniques!

    Hope this helps

  5. To me, katakana looks the simplest/blockiest; hiragana is a little bit more "swirly" or curvy-looking, and kanji looks the Chinese-iest/hardest/most complicated.  Although I guess the best way to tell them apart is to just memorize how they look (at least the kana).

    Here's a link with some charts and flash cards if that helps; we used this book in my Japanese 1 class: http://genki.japantimes.co.jp/self/self....

  6. Sounds hard. Wish i could help.

  7. Basic pointers:

    Hiragana:   Have curvy lines

    Kata kana :   have sharp corners and usually just straight or at an angle

    Kanji:   multiple complicated lines mixed together in (more strokes)

  8. wow, are you trying to break a record?

    they usually teach you hiragana first,  

    and when you've mastered it (like forming words and sentences)

    they teach you katakana (and the difference between hiragana)

    and then after you can understand the meaning of the words

    (in terms of characters)

    they teach you the basic  kanji

    example

    when writing the days of the week

    Monday  (getsu 月 meaning moon)

    Tuesday  (Ka    ÃƒÂ§Ã‚Â«Ã£Â€Â€fire)

    Wednesday  (sui  ÃƒÂ¦Ã‚°Â´Ã£Â€Â€water)

    Thursday  (moku  ÃƒÂ¦Ã‚œÂ¨Ã£Â€Â€Ã£Â€Â€wood)

    Friday  (kin  ÃƒÂ©Ã‚‡Â‘  gold)

    Saturday (dou  ÃƒÂ¥Ã‚œÂŸÃ£Â€Â€earth or sand, clay)

    Sunday  (nichi  ÃƒÂ¦Ã‚—Â¥  sunlight,  day)

    every character has a different meaning behind it

    Most people start learning how to speak the language first.

    maybe you shouldnt take on too much too soon.

    gambatte


  9. hiragana

    http://japanese.about.com/library/blhira...

    katakana

    http://japanese.about.com/blkatakana1.ht...

    other complicated characters are kanji.

    good luck :)

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