Learn Hiragana: Complete Japanese Script Guide with Chart

Beginner7 min104 charactersWith audio
Hiragana is one of Japan's three writing systems and the foundational script for every Japanese learner. It has 46 base characters plus 58 modifiers for a total of 104, each representing a specific syllable sound. Every written Japanese sentence mixes hiragana with katakana and kanji: hiragana carries grammatical function (particles, verb endings, conjunctions) while kanji and katakana carry lexical meaning. You cannot decode a real Japanese sentence without it. Most learners reach full recognition of the 104-character set in one to two weeks of daily practice.
Base characters
46
With modifiers
104
Direction
Left to right
Role
Grammar and native words
On this page
  1. 1. History and evolution
  2. 2. Where the shapes come from
  3. 3. How Hiragana fits in written Japanese
  4. 4. Common pitfalls
  5. 5. How to learn Hiragana
  6. 6. How Hard Is Japanese for English Speakers?
  7. 7. Frequently asked questions
Gojuon (Basic)
a
i
u
e
o
k
s
t
n
h
m
y
r
w
Dakuten (Voiced)
a
i
u
e
o
g
z
d
b
Handakuten (P-sounds)
a
i
u
e
o
p
Yoon (Combinations)
ya
yu
yo
k
s
t
n
h
m
r
g
z
b
p

History and evolution

Hiragana emerged during the Heian period (794–1185), adapted from cursive simplifications of Chinese characters in a system called man'yōgana. Until then, Japanese was written in kanji used phonetically or semantically, and writing even short texts required memorizing hundreds of full kanji. Court women at the Heian capital developed a shorthand by softening man'yōgana into flowing strokes. The script was first known as onna-de (女手), "women's hand", since men continued using formal Chinese writing (kanbun) for scholarship and government. Literature written in hiragana flourished anyway: The Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu, completed around 1010 CE and often cited as the world's first novel, is written almost entirely in hiragana. Over the Kamakura and Edo periods, hiragana crossed class and gender lines to become the standard phonetic script for native Japanese vocabulary. The modern 46-character gojūon set was fixed by the 1900 Elementary School Order; post-WWII reforms in 1946 (現代仮名遣い, modern kana usage) regularized spelling conventions, including the particle rules that trip up learners today.

Where the shapes come from

Every hiragana character descends from a specific kanji, simplified through centuries of cursive writing. The derivation is a proven memory aid, many shapes make intuitive sense once you see the parent kanji. A few anchors: あ from 安 (an, peace); い from 以 (by means of); う from 宇 (universe); え from 衣 (clothing); か from 加 (add); き from 幾 (how many); さ from 左 (left); し from 之 (of); な from 奈 (Nara); ほ from 保 (preserve). These derivations were documented in Japanese calligraphy manuals by the late Heian period and are part of standard primary-school education in Japan today.

How Hiragana fits in written Japanese

Japanese text mixes hiragana with katakana and kanji in a predictable pattern. Hiragana carries grammar: particles (は, が, を, に), verb conjugations (〜ます, 〜た, 〜ない), and connectors (〜から, 〜ので). Kanji carries lexical meaning: nouns, adjective stems, verb stems. Katakana handles loanwords and emphasis. A typical sentence mixes all three, with hiragana stitching grammar around the content words. This division is why hiragana is the first script to learn: without it, you cannot read a complete Japanese sentence.

Common pitfalls

Particle は is pronounced "wa"
When は marks the topic of a sentence (watashi wa…), it's pronounced "wa", not "ha". Inside vocabulary words like はな (hana, flower) it stays "ha". The split traces to the 1946 spelling reform, which kept historical spelling for particles.
Particle を is pronounced "o"
を marks the direct object and is pronounced "o" in modern Japanese. Outside this grammatical role, を is effectively obsolete, every other "o" sound uses お.
Particle へ is pronounced "e"
When marking direction (学校へ, gakkō e, "to school"), へ is pronounced "e". In ordinary words it keeps its "he" sound.
Small っ doubles the next consonant
A small っ (sokuon) doubles the consonant that follows. きって reads "kitte" (stamp), not "kitsute". Native speakers hold a brief silent pause where the small っ sits.
Long vowels change meaning
Double vowels lengthen the sound. Mispronouncing length can change the word: おばさん (obasan, aunt) vs おばあさん (obāsan, grandmother). In katakana, length is marked with ー instead of a second vowel.

How to learn Hiragana

  1. Learn the gojūon vowels and rows first. The five vowels (あいうえお) repeat across every consonant row, k-row is か き く け こ, s-row is さ し す せ そ. Once the pattern clicks, the 46 characters organize themselves into a chart you can read across.
  2. Add the dakuten and handakuten modifiers next. A tick (゛) on か makes が (ga); on は makes ば (ba). A small circle (゜) on は makes ぱ (pa). Same shapes, slightly different sounds.
  3. Learn the yōon combinations last (きゃ, しゅ, ちょ). They're a base kana plus a small や/ゆ/よ, combinations, not new characters. This completes the 104-character set.
  4. Use spaced repetition daily. Flashcard apps like Anki schedule the hardest characters for more frequent review. Ten minutes per day for two weeks outperforms any other technique for character recognition (Karpicke & Roediger, 2008 on the testing effect).
  5. Practice stroke order if you plan to handwrite. For screen-only learners the memory benefit is modest (Mori & Shimizu, 2007 on kana stroke-order effects); stroke order matters more for kanji.
  6. Read pure-hiragana texts early. Children's books, simple manga with furigana, and beginner-graded readers drill recognition in context far faster than flashcards alone.

How Hard Is Japanese for English Speakers?

Japanese is classified by the US Foreign Service Institute as a Category IV language, about 2,200 class hours to professional working proficiency for native English speakers, the same tier as Arabic, Chinese, and Korean. The three-script writing system is the most visible barrier: hiragana and katakana are learnable in weeks, but kanji takes years of steady study. Spoken grammar is moderately complex: subject-object-verb word order, extensive politeness levels (keigo), and context-driven subject omission. Pronunciation is actually forgiving for English speakers; most sounds have English equivalents and Japanese has no tones.

Frequently asked questions

How many letters are in the Japanese alphabet?

Japanese does not have a single alphabet but uses three scripts. Hiragana has 46 basic characters, katakana has 46 matching characters, and kanji includes over 2,000 characters for everyday use. Combined, a literate adult knows roughly 2,100+ symbols. Beginners start with hiragana and katakana (92 characters total), which can be learned in a few weeks.

How do you learn the Japanese alphabet?

Start with hiragana, then katakana, then kanji. Practice writing each character by hand while saying its sound aloud to build muscle memory and phonetic recall simultaneously. Use spaced repetition flashcards through apps like Anki or WaniKani to retain what you learn. Most beginners memorize both kana scripts in 2 to 4 weeks with 20 minutes of daily practice.

How do you learn to read Japanese?

Begin by memorizing hiragana and katakana, which let you sound out most words phonetically. Once comfortable, start learning common kanji through graded readers designed for beginners. Reading children's books, manga with furigana (small kana above kanji), and NHK Web Easy news articles builds fluency progressively. Consistent daily reading, even 10 minutes, accelerates recognition speed significantly.

What is the Japanese alphabet in order?

The traditional order follows the "gojūon" (fifty sounds) chart, starting with the vowels あ (a), い (i), う (u), え (e), お (o), then か (ka), き (ki), く (ku), け (ke), こ (ko), and continuing through the consonant rows: sa, ta, na, ha, ma, ya, ra, wa, ending with ん (n). Katakana follows the same sequence.

How is the Japanese alphabet pronounced?

Japanese pronunciation is highly consistent: each kana character represents one fixed syllable. The five vowels (a, i, u, e, o) sound similar to Spanish or Italian vowels. Consonants are generally soft, with "r" sounding between an English "l" and "d." Unlike English, there are no silent letters or irregular spellings, making pronunciation predictable once you learn the kana.

What is the best Japanese alphabet for beginners?

Hiragana is the best starting script for beginners. It covers all native Japanese sounds, appears in grammar particles and verb endings, and is the foundation for reading any Japanese text. After mastering hiragana (typically 1 to 2 weeks), move to katakana for foreign loanwords. Kanji comes last and is learned gradually over months and years.

How long does it take to learn the Japanese alphabet?

Most learners memorize hiragana in 1 to 2 weeks and katakana in another 1 to 2 weeks with 20 to 30 minutes of daily practice. That gives you both kana scripts (92 characters) within a month. Kanji takes much longer: reaching the 2,136 jōyō kanji used in daily life typically requires 1.5 to 3 years of consistent study.

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