Hiragana ( 平仮名 , ひらがな , IPA: [çiɾaɡaꜜna, çiɾaɡana(ꜜ)] ) is a Japanese syllabary , part of the Japanese writing system , along with katakana as well as kanji .
57-521: Toshiko is a feminine Japanese given name. The name can also be written in hiragana (としこ) or katakana (トシコ). Hiragana It is a phonetic lettering system. The word hiragana means "common" or "plain" kana (originally also "easy", as contrasted with kanji). Hiragana and katakana are both kana systems. With few exceptions, each mora in the Japanese language is represented by one character (or one digraph) in each system. This may be
114-513: A dakuten marker ( ゛), a voiceless consonant is turned into a voiced consonant : k → g , ts/s → z , t → d , h/f → b and ch / sh → j (also u → v(u) ). For example, か ( ka ) becomes が ( ga ). Hiragana beginning with an h (or f ) sound can also add a handakuten marker ( ゜) changing the h ( f ) to a p . For example, は ( ha ) becomes ぱ ( pa ). A small version of the hiragana for ya , yu , or yo (ゃ, ゅ or ょ respectively) may be added to hiragana ending in i . This changes
171-661: A consonant sometimes causes surrounding vowels to change by coarticulation or assimilation . In Russian, "soft" (palatalized) consonants are usually followed by vowels that are relatively more front (that is, closer to [i] or [y] ), and vowels following "hard" (unpalatalized) consonants are further back . See Russian phonology § Allophony for more information. In many Slavic languages , palatal or palatalized consonants are called soft , and others are called hard . Some of them, like Russian , have numerous pairs of palatalized and unpalatalized consonant phonemes. Russian Cyrillic has pairs of vowel letters that mark whether
228-410: A vowel such as /a/ (hiragana あ ); a consonant followed by a vowel such as /ka/ ( か ); or /N/ ( ん ), a nasal sonorant which, depending on the context and dialect, sounds either like English m , n or ng ( [ ŋ ] ) when syllable-final or like the nasal vowels of French , Portuguese or Polish . Because the characters of the kana do not represent single consonants (except in the case of
285-565: Is phonemically orthographic , i.e. there is a one-to-one correspondence between kana characters and sounds, leaving only words' pitch accent unrepresented. This has not always been the case: a previous system of spelling, now referred to as historical kana usage , differed substantially from pronunciation; the three above-mentioned exceptions in modern usage are the legacy of that system. There are two hiragana pronounced ji (じ and ぢ) and two hiragana pronounced zu (ず and づ), but to distinguish them, particularly when typing Japanese , sometimes ぢ
342-480: Is つづく . For compound words where the dakuten reflects rendaku voicing, the original hiragana is used. For example, chi ( 血 'blood') is spelled ち in plain hiragana. When 鼻 hana ('nose') and 血 chi ('blood') combine to make hanaji ( 鼻血 'nose bleed'), the sound of 血 changes from chi to ji . So hanaji is spelled はなぢ . Similarly, tsukau ( 使う/遣う ; 'to use') is spelled つかう in hiragana, so kanazukai ( 仮名遣い ; 'kana use', or 'kana orthography')
399-735: Is U+1B130–U+1B16F: In the following character sequences a kana from the /k/ row is modified by a handakuten combining mark to indicate that a syllable starts with an initial nasal, known as bidakuon [ ja ] . As of Unicode 16.0, these character combinations are explicitly called out as Named Sequences: 「かたかな」の「かた」は単に「片方」という意味ではなく、本来あるべきものが欠落しているという評価形容語と解すべきことはよく知られているが(亀井孝1941)、(7)としてまとめた対立関係から考えると、「ひらがな」も同様に「かな」の「ひら」という評価位置に存在するものと考えられる。 本国語大辞典「ひらがな」の説明は「ひら」を「角のない、通俗平易の意」とし、また「ひら」を前部要素とする複合語の形態素説明で、多くの辞書は「ひら」に「たいら」という意味を認める。 Palatalization (phonetics) In phonetics , palatalization ( / ˌ p æ l ə t ə l aɪ ˈ z eɪ ʃ ən / , US also /- l ɪ -/ ) or palatization
456-722: Is a way of pronouncing a consonant in which part of the tongue is moved close to the hard palate . Consonants pronounced this way are said to be palatalized and are transcribed in the International Phonetic Alphabet by affixing the letter ⟨ʲ⟩ to the base consonant. Palatalization is not phonemic in English, but it is in Slavic languages such as Russian and Ukrainian , Finnic languages such as Estonian and Võro , Irish , Marshallese , Kashmiri , and Japanese . In technical terms, palatalization refers to
513-600: Is arranged in a traditional manner, beginning top right and reading columns down. The numbers and arrows indicate the stroke order and direction respectively. Hiragana was added to the Unicode Standard in October, 1991 with the release of version 1.0. The Unicode block for Hiragana is U+3040–U+309F: The Unicode hiragana block contains precomposed characters for all hiragana in the modern set, including small vowels and yōon kana for compound syllables as well as
570-566: Is generally arduous for a contemporary speaker to consciously perceive inazuma as separable into two discrete words. Thus, the default spelling いなずま is used instead of いなづま . Other examples include kizuna ( きずな ) and sakazuki ( さかずき ). Although these rules were officially established by a Cabinet Notice in 1986 revising the modern kana usage , they have sometimes faced criticism due to their perceived arbitrariness. Officially, ぢ and づ do not occur word-initially pursuant to modern spelling rules. There were words such as ぢばん jiban 'ground' in
627-603: Is included in Unicode 14 as HIRAGANA LETTER ARCHAIC WU (𛄟). Hiragana developed from man'yōgana , Chinese characters used for their pronunciations, a practice that started in the 5th century. The oldest examples of Man'yōgana include the Inariyama Sword , an iron sword excavated at the Inariyama Kofun. This sword is thought to be made in the year 辛亥年 (most commonly taken to be C.E. 471). The forms of
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#1732787064207684-532: Is normally treated as its own syllable and is separate from the other n -based kana ( na , ni etc.). ん is sometimes directly followed by a vowel ( a , i , u , e or o ) or a palatal approximant ( ya , yu or yo ). These are clearly distinct from the na , ni etc. syllables, and there are minimal pairs such as きんえん kin'en 'smoking forbidden', きねん kinen 'commemoration', きんねん kinnen 'recent years'. In Hepburn romanization, they are distinguished with an apostrophe, but not all romanization methods make
741-440: Is now completely obsolete. ゔ vu is a modern addition used to represent the /v/ sound in foreign languages such as English, but since Japanese from a phonological standpoint does not have a /v/ sound, it is pronounced as /b/ and mostly serves as a more accurate indicator of a word's pronunciation in its original language. However, it is rarely seen because loanwords and transliterated words are usually written in katakana , where
798-584: Is pronounced [ɕiteiɾɯ] 'is doing'. In archaic forms of Japanese, there existed the kwa ( くゎ [kʷa] ) and gwa ( ぐゎ [ɡʷa] ) digraphs. In modern Japanese, these phonemes have been phased out of usage. For a more thorough discussion on the sounds of Japanese, please refer to Japanese phonology . With a few exceptions, such as for the three particles は (pronounced [wa] instead of [ha] ), へ (pronounced [e] instead of [he] ) and [o] (written を instead of お), Japanese when written in kana
855-597: Is rarely used with hiragana, for example in the word らーめん , rāmen , but this usage is considered non-standard in Japanese. However, the Okinawan language uses chōonpu with hiragana. In informal writing, small versions of the five vowel kana are sometimes used to represent trailing off sounds ( はぁ , haa , ねぇ , nee ). Plain (clear) and voiced iteration marks are written in hiragana as ゝ and ゞ, respectively. These marks are rarely used nowadays. The following table shows
912-505: Is spelled かなづかい in hiragana. However, there are cases where ぢ and づ are not used, such as the word for 'lightning', inazuma ( 稲妻 ). The first component, 稲 , meaning 'rice plant', is written いな ( ina ). The second component, 妻 (etymologically 夫 ), meaning 'spouse', is pronounced つま ( tsuma ) when standalone or often as づま (zuma) when following another syllable, such in 人妻 ( hitozuma , 'married woman'). Even though these components of 稲妻 are etymologically linked to 'lightning', it
969-428: Is used as a morpheme or part of a morpheme. In some cases, a vowel caused a consonant to become palatalized, and then this vowel was lost by elision . Here, there appears to be a phonemic contrast when analysis of the deep structure shows it to be allophonic. In Romanian , consonants are palatalized before /i/ . Palatalized consonants appear at the end of the word, and mark the plural in nouns and adjectives, and
1026-531: Is used to add the diacritics to kana that are not normally used with them, for example applying the dakuten to a pure vowel or the handakuten to a kana not in the h-group. Characters U+3095 and U+3096 are small か ( ka ) and small け ( ke ), respectively. U+309F is a ligature of より ( yori ) occasionally used in vertical text. U+309B and U+309C are spacing (non-combining) equivalents to the combining dakuten and handakuten characters, respectively. Historic and variant forms of Japanese kana characters were first added to
1083-437: Is written as di and づ is written as du . These pairs are not interchangeable. Usually, ji is written as じ and zu is written as ず. There are some exceptions. If the first two syllables of a word consist of one syllable without a dakuten and the same syllable with a dakuten , the same hiragana is used to write the sounds. For example, chijimeru ('to boil down' or 'to shrink') is spelled ちぢめる and tsuzuku ('to continue')
1140-797: The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), palatalized consonants are marked by the modifier letter ⟨ʲ⟩ , a superscript version of the symbol for the palatal approximant ⟨ j ⟩. For instance, ⟨ tʲ ⟩ represents the palatalized form of the voiceless alveolar stop [t] . Prior to 1989 , a subscript diacritic was used in the IPA: ⟨ ᶀ ᶈ ᶆ ᶂ ᶌ ƫ ᶁ ᶇ ᶊ ᶎ ᶅ 𝼓 ᶉ 𝼖 𝼕 ᶄ ᶃ 𝼔 ᶍ ꞕ ⟩, apart from two palatalized fricatives which were written instead with curly-tailed variants, namely ⟨ ʆ ⟩ for [ʃʲ] and ⟨ ʓ ⟩ for [ʒʲ] . (See palatal hook .) The Uralic Phonetic Alphabet marks palatalized consonants by an acute accent , as do some Finnic languages using
1197-512: The Unicode Standard in October, 2010 with the release of version 6.0, with significantly more added in 2017 as part of Unicode 10. The Unicode block for Kana Supplement is U+1B000–U+1B0FF, and is immediately followed by the Kana Extended-A block (U+1B100–U+1B12F). These blocks include mainly hentaigana (historic or variant hiragana): The Unicode block for Kana Extended-B is U+1AFF0–U+1AFFF: The Unicode block for Small Kana Extension
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#17327870642071254-428: The g sound (normally [ɡ] ) may turn into a velar nasal [ŋ] or velar fricative [ɣ] . For example, かぎ ( kagi , key) is often pronounced [kaŋi] . However, じゅうご ( jūgo , fifteen) is pronounced as if it was jū and go stacked end to end: [d͡ʑɯːɡo] . In many accents, the j and z sounds are pronounced as affricates ( [d͡ʑ] and [d͡z] , respectively) at the beginning of utterances and fricatives [ʑ, z] in
1311-400: The historical kana usage , but they were unified under じ in the modern kana usage in 1946, so today it is spelled exclusively じばん . However, づら zura 'wig' (from かつら katsura ) and づけ zuke (a sushi term for lean tuna soaked in soy sauce) are examples of word-initial づ today. No standard Japanese words begin with the kana ん ( n ). This is the basis of the word game shiritori . ん n
1368-489: The i vowel sound to a glide ( palatalization ) to a , u or o . For example, き ( ki ) plus ゃ (small ya ) becomes きゃ ( kya ). Addition of the small y kana is called yōon . A small tsu っ, called a sokuon , indicates that the following consonant is geminated (doubled). In Japanese this is an important distinction in pronunciation; for example, compare さか , saka , "hill" with さっか , sakka , "author". However, it cannot be used to double an n – for this purpose,
1425-583: The secondary articulation of consonants by which the body of the tongue is raised toward the hard palate and the alveolar ridge during the articulation of the consonant. Such consonants are phonetically palatalized. "Pure" palatalization is a modification to the articulation of a consonant, where the middle of the tongue is raised, and nothing else. It may produce a laminal articulation of otherwise apical consonants such as /t/ and /s/ . Phonetically palatalized consonants may vary in their exact realization. Some languages add semivowels before or after
1482-454: The 50 theoretically possible combinations, yi , ye , and wu are completely unused. On the w row, ゐ and ゑ , pronounced [i] and [e] respectively, are uncommon in modern Japanese, while を , pronounced [o] , is common as a particle but otherwise rare. Strictly speaking, the singular consonant ん ( n ) is considered as outside the gojūon . These basic characters can be modified in various ways. By adding
1539-634: The Latin alphabet, as in Võro ⟨ ś ⟩ . Others use an apostrophe, as in Karelian ⟨s'⟩ ; or digraphs in j , as in the Savonian dialects of Finnish , ⟨sj⟩ . Palatalization has varying phonological significance in different languages. It is allophonic in English, but phonemic in others. In English, consonants are palatalized when they occur before front vowels or
1596-465: The advent of kana ), but is generally represented for purposes of reconstruction by the kanji 江, and its hiragana form is not present in any known orthography. In modern orthography, ye can also be written as いぇ (イェ in katakana ). While hiragana and katakana letters for "ye" were used for a short period after the advent of kana, the distinction between /ye/ and /e/ disappeared before glyphs could become established. It has not been demonstrated whether
1653-402: The aforementioned ん), the kana are referred to as syllabic symbols and not alphabetic letters. Hiragana is used to write okurigana (kana suffixes following a kanji root, for example to inflect verbs and adjectives), various grammatical and function words including particles , and miscellaneous other native words for which there are no kanji or whose kanji form is obscure or too formal for
1710-414: The complete hiragana together with the modified Hepburn romanization and IPA transcription, arranged in four categories, each of them displayed in the gojūon order. Those whose romanization are in bold do not use the initial consonant for that row. For all syllables besides ん, the pronunciation indicated is for word-initial syllables; for mid-word pronunciations see below. In the middle of words,
1767-593: The consonant preceding them is hard/soft: ⟨ а ⟩ / ⟨ я ⟩ , ⟨ э ⟩ / ⟨ е ⟩ , ⟨ ы ⟩ / ⟨ и ⟩ , ⟨ о ⟩ / ⟨ ё ⟩ , and ⟨ у ⟩ / ⟨ ю ⟩ . The otherwise silent soft sign ⟨ ь ⟩ also indicates that the previous consonant is soft. Irish and Scottish Gaelic have pairs of palatalized ( slender ) and unpalatalized ( broad ) consonant phonemes. In Irish, most broad consonants are velarized . In Scottish Gaelic,
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1824-425: The corresponding character would be written as ヴ. The digraphs ぢゃ , ぢゅ , ぢょ for ja / ju / jo are theoretically possible in rendaku , but are nearly never used in modern kana usage ; for example, the word 夫婦茶碗 , meoto-jawan (couple bowls), spelled めおとぢゃわん , where 茶碗 alone is spelled ちゃわん ( chawan ). The みゅ myu kana is extremely rare in originally Japanese words; linguist Haruhiko Kindaichi raises
1881-404: The diphthongs ou and ei are usually pronounced [oː] (long o) and [eː] (long e) respectively. For example, とうきょう (lit. toukyou ) is pronounced [toːkʲoː] 'Tokyo', and せんせい sensei is [seɯ̃seː] 'teacher'. However, とう tou is pronounced [toɯ] 'to inquire', because the o and u are considered distinct, u being the verb ending in the dictionary form. Similarly, している shite iru
1938-451: The distinction. For example, past prime minister Junichiro Koizumi 's first name is actually じゅんいちろう Jun'ichirō pronounced [dʑɯɰ̃itɕiɾoː] There are a few hiragana that are rarely used. Outside of Okinawan orthography, ゐ wi [i] and ゑ we [e] are only used in some proper names. 𛀁 e was an alternate version of え e before spelling reform, and was briefly reused for ye during initial spelling reforms, but
1995-474: The example of the Japanese family name Omamyūda ( 小豆生田 ) and claims it is the only occurrence amongst pure Japanese words. Its katakana counterpart is used in many loanwords, however. On the row beginning with わ /wa/, the hiragana ゐ /wi/ and ゑ /we/ are both quasi-obsolete, only used in some names. They are usually respectively pronounced [i] and [e]. In modified Hepburn romanization, they are generally written i and e . It has not been demonstrated whether
2052-829: The front vowel /i/ and not palatalized in other cases. In some languages, palatalization is a distinctive feature that distinguishes two consonant phonemes . This feature occurs in Russian , Irish , and Scottish Gaelic , among others. Phonemic palatalization may be contrasted with either plain or velarized articulation. In many of the Slavic languages , and some of the Baltic and Finnic languages , palatalized consonants contrast with plain consonants, but in Irish they contrast with velarized consonants. Some palatalized phonemes undergo change beyond phonetic palatalization. For instance,
2109-421: The hiragana originate from the cursive script style of Chinese calligraphy . The table to the right shows the derivation of hiragana from manyōgana via cursive script. The upper part shows the character in the regular script form, the center character in red shows the cursive script form of the character, and the bottom shows the equivalent hiragana. The cursive script forms are not strictly confined to those in
2166-510: The illustration. When it was first developed, hiragana was not accepted by everyone. The educated or elites preferred to use only the kanji system. Historically, in Japan, the regular script ( kaisho ) form of the characters was used by men and called otokode ( 男手 ) , "men's writing", while the cursive script ( sōsho ) form of the kanji was used by women. Hence hiragana first gained popularity among women, who were generally not allowed access to
2223-453: The middle of words. For example, すうじ sūji [sɯːʑi] 'number', ざっし zasshi [d͡zaɕɕi] 'magazine'. The singular n is pronounced [m] before m , b and p , [n] before t , ch , ts , n , r , z , j and d , [ŋ] before k and g , [ɴ] at the end of utterances, and some kind of high nasal vowel [ɰ̃] before vowels, palatal approximants ( y ), and fricative consonants ( s , sh , h , f and w ). In kanji readings,
2280-585: The mora /ji/ existed in old Japanese. Though ye did appear in some textbooks during the Meiji period along with another kana for yi in the form of cursive 以. Today it is considered a Hentaigana by scholars and is encoded in Unicode 10 ( 𛀆 ) This kana could have a colloquial use, to convert the combo yui (ゆい) into yii ( 𛀆 い), due to other Japanese words having a similar change. An early, now obsolete, hiragana-esque form of ye may have existed ( 𛀁 [je] ) in pre-Classical Japanese (prior to
2337-415: The mora /wu/ existed in old Japanese. However, hiragana wu also appeared in different Meiji-era textbooks ( [REDACTED] ). Although there are several possible source kanji, it is likely to have been derived from a cursive form of the man'yōgana 汙 , although a related variant sometimes listed ( [REDACTED] ) is from a cursive form of 紆 . However, it was never commonly used. This character
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2394-571: The more prevalent gojūon ordering. After the 1900 script reform , which deemed hundreds of characters hentaigana , the hiragana syllabary consists of 48 base characters, of which two ( ゐ and ゑ ) are only used in some proper names: These are conceived as a 5×10 grid ( gojūon , 五十音 , "Fifty Sounds"), as illustrated in the adjacent table, read あ ( a ), い ( i ), う ( u ), え ( e ), お ( o ), か ( ka ), き ( ki ), く ( ku ), け ( ke ), こ ( ko ) and so forth (but si → shi , ti → chi , tu → tsu , hu → fu , wi → i , we → e , wo → o ). Of
2451-445: The only velarized consonants are [n̪ˠ] and [l̪ˠ] ; [r] is sometimes described as velarized as well. Yōon are Japanese moras formed with an added [ j ] sound between the initial consonant and the vowel. For example, 今日 ( kyō , "today") is written きょう [ kʲoo ], using a small version of よ , while 器用 ( kiyō , "skillful") is written きよう [ kijoo ], with a full-sized よ. Historically , yōon were not distinguished with
2508-491: The other). In some languages, like English, palatalization is allophonic . Some phonemes have palatalized allophones in certain contexts, typically before front vowels and unpalatalized allophones elsewhere. Because it is allophonic, palatalization of this type does not distinguish words and often goes unnoticed by native speakers. Phonetic palatalization occurs in American English. Stops are palatalized before
2565-414: The palatal approximant (and in a few other cases), but no words are distinguished by palatalization ( complementary distribution ), whereas in some of the other languages, the difference between palatalized consonants and plain un-palatalized consonants distinguish es between words, appearing in a contrastive distribution (where one of the two versions, palatalized or not, appears in the same environment as
2622-556: The palatalization is heard as both an onglide and an offglide. In some cases, the realization of palatalization may change without any corresponding phonemic change. For example, according to Thurneysen, palatalized consonants at the end of a syllable in Old Irish had a corresponding onglide (reflected as ⟨i⟩ in the spelling), which was no longer present in Middle Irish (based on explicit testimony of grammarians of
2679-411: The palatalized consonant (onglides or offglides). In such cases, the vowel (especially a non-front vowel) following a palatalized consonant typically has a palatal onglide. In Russian , both plain and palatalized consonant phonemes are found in words like большой [bɐlʲˈʂoj] , царь [tsarʲ] and Катя [ˈkatʲə] . In Hupa , on the other hand,
2736-407: The rare ゐ wi and ゑ we ; the archaic 𛀁 ye is included in plane 1 at U+1B001 (see below). All combinations of hiragana with dakuten and handakuten used in modern Japanese are available as precomposed characters (including the rare ゔ vu ), and can also be produced by using a base hiragana followed by the combining dakuten and handakuten characters (U+3099 and U+309A, respectively). This method
2793-470: The same levels of education as men, thus hiragana was first widely used among court women in the writing of personal communications and literature. From this comes the alternative name of onnade ( 女手 ) "women's writing". For example, The Tale of Genji and other early novels by female authors used hiragana extensively or exclusively. Even today, hiragana is felt to have a feminine quality. Male authors came to write literature using hiragana. Hiragana
2850-859: The second person singular in verbs. On the surface, it would appear then that ban [ban] "coin" forms a minimal pair with bani [banʲ] . The interpretation commonly taken, however, is that an underlying morpheme |-i| palatalizes the consonant and is subsequently deleted. Palatalization may also occur as a morphological feature. For example, although Russian makes phonemic contrasts between palatalized and unpalatalized consonants, alternations across morpheme boundaries are normal: In some languages, allophonic palatalization developed into phonemic palatalization by phonemic split . In other languages, phonemes that were originally phonetically palatalized changed further: palatal secondary place of articulation developed into changes in manner of articulation or primary place of articulation. Phonetic palatalization of
2907-470: The singular n (ん) is added in front of the syllable, as in みんな ( minna , "all"). The sokuon also sometimes appears at the end of utterances, where it denotes a glottal stop , as in いてっ! ( [iteʔ] , "Ouch!"). Two hiragana have pronunciations that depend on the context: Hiragana usually spells long vowels with the addition of a second vowel kana; for example, おかあさん ( o-ka-a-sa-n , "mother"). The chōonpu (long vowel mark) (ー) used in katakana
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#17327870642072964-586: The smaller kana and had to be determined by context. In the Marshallese language , each consonant has some type of secondary articulation (palatalization, velarization, or labiovelarization ). The palatalized consonants are regarded as "light", and the velarized and rounded consonants are regarded as "heavy", with the rounded consonants being both velarized and labialized. Many Norwegian dialects have phonemic palatalized consonants. In many parts of Northern Norway and many areas of Møre og Romsdal, for example,
3021-586: The time). In a few languages, including Skolt Sami and many of the Central Chadic languages , palatalization is a suprasegmental feature that affects the pronunciation of an entire syllable, and it may cause certain vowels to be pronounced more front and consonants to be slightly palatalized. In Skolt Sami and its relatives ( Kildin Sami and Ter Sami ), suprasegmental palatalization contrasts with segmental palatal articulation (palatal consonants). In
3078-449: The unpalatalized sibilant (Irish /sˠ/ , Scottish /s̪/ ) has a palatalized counterpart that is actually postalveolar [ʃ] , not phonetically palatalized [sʲ] , and the velar fricative /x/ in both languages has a palatalized counterpart that is actually palatal [ç] rather than palatalized velar [xʲ] . These shifts in primary place of articulation are examples of the sound change of palatalization . In some languages, palatalization
3135-406: The writing purpose. Words that do have common kanji renditions may also sometimes be written instead in hiragana, according to an individual author's preference, for example to impart an informal feel. Hiragana is also used to write furigana , a reading aid that shows the pronunciation of kanji characters. There are two main systems of ordering hiragana : the old-fashioned iroha ordering and
3192-505: Was more than one possible hiragana. In 1900, the system was simplified so each syllable had only one hiragana. The deprecated hiragana are now known as hentaigana ( 変体仮名 ) . The pangram poem Iroha -uta ("ABC song/poem"), which dates to the 10th century, uses every hiragana once (except n ん, which was just a variant of む before the Muromachi era ). The following table shows the method for writing each hiragana character. The table
3249-423: Was used for unofficial writing such as personal letters, while katakana and kanji were used for official documents. In modern times, the usage of hiragana has become mixed with katakana writing. Katakana is now relegated to special uses such as recently borrowed words (i.e., since the 19th century), names in transliteration , the names of animals, in telegrams, and for emphasis. Originally, for all syllables there
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