Do you want to learn Japanese ? If yes , you have the same interest as me. So everyday, let's us learn some basis things about Japanese. Now let' explore !!!
Japanese Lessons
We have divided our 'Free Learn Japanese' course into lessons. Please start from the first Japanese lesson and proceed to the next Japanese lesson only when you have thoroughly understood and learned the previous Japanese lesson:
Basic Japanese
Lesson 1 : Hiragana - Learn the Japanese alphabets.
Lesson 2 : Katakana - Another set of Japanese alphabets.
Lesson 3 : Learn Basic Japanese - Greeting and introducing yourself.
Lesson 4 : Japanese Vocabulary - Minimal set of Japanese vocabulary to start with.
Lesson 5 : Basic Japanese Grammar - Minimal set of Japanese grammar.
Lesson 6 : Basic Kanji - Learn some basic kanji.
Lesson 7 : Basic Japanese Sentences - Small Japanese sentences to start with.
Lesson 8 : Introduction in Japanese - Introducing somebody in a party.
Lesson 9 : Japanese at Restaurant - How to speak japanese in a restaurant.
Lesson 10 : Asking Directions in Japanese - What words to use while asking directions in japanese.
Hiragana
The first step in learn japanese language is to learn the japanese alphabets. Alphabets listed below in the table are called hiragana alphabets or hiragana characters. Japanese language also consists of Chinese characters called Kanji, which we will discuss later, and another japanese alphabet set called katakana, which is used for foreign language words. Katakana will be covered in the next lesson.
The first step in learn japanese language is to learn the japanese alphabets. Alphabets listed below in the table are called hiragana alphabets or hiragana characters. Japanese language also consists of Chinese characters called Kanji, which we will discuss later, and another japanese alphabet set called katakana, which is used for foreign language words. Katakana will be covered in the next lesson.
There are 5 vowels in the Japanese language:
[ a ] pronounced as "aa"
[ i ] pronounced as "ee" or as "e" in "eat"
[ u ] pronounced as "oo" in "soon"
[ e ] pronounced as "e" in "elk"
[ o ] pronounced as "o" in "more"
All Hiragana characters end with one of these vowels, with the exception of [ n ]. The only "consanent" that does not resemble that of English is the Japanese "r". It is slightly "rolled" as if it were a combination of a "d", "r", and "l".
Hiraganas are divided into three groups. Shown below are three hiragana charts for 3 hiragana groups. Please note that 3rd hiragana group (3rd Hiranaga Chart) is made of combination letters.
Exceptions:
[ha] is pronounced "wa" when it is immediately follows the subject. It is usually only pronounced "ha" when it is a part of a word.
[he] is pronounced "e" when it immediately follows a place or direction. Both of these are very simple to detect
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