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Writing Hiragana - か-行 (ka-row) characters

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How to write Hiragana か-行 (ka-row) characters 「か = ka」「き = ki」「く= ku」「け = ke」「こ = ko」these five characters are sits in the 2nd row of Japanese characters sets. か-行 can be transformed into voice/nasal sound by adding dakuten, which are 「が = ga」「ぎ = gi」「ぐ = gu」「げ = ge」「ご = go」. For the beginners this video may help to know how to write the characters easily. Here is the previous video on Hiragana writing series: Writing Hiragana - あ-行 (a-row) characters Other Lessons: Lesson 1: Why Japanese Language Lesson 2: JLPT N5 Introduction Lesson 3: Hiragana Part 1 Lesson 4: Hiragana Part 2 Lesson 5: Katakana Part 1 Lesson 6: Katakana Part 2 Lesson 7: Kanji Part 1 Lesson 8: Japanese Everyday Greetings Lesson 9: Japanese Particles Introduction Lesson 10: Grammar Time Lesson 11: Verb Basic Lesson 12 - Vocabulary Lesson 13 - Grammar - Verb: Part 2

Writing Hiragana - あ-行 (a-row) characters

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Writing Hiragana - あ-行 (a-row) characters This five characters are the only pure vowel hiragana characters.

JLPT N5 - Lesson 4 - Hiragana Part 2 - Dakuon and Handakuon

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Dakuon ( '' ) or dakuten are two small strokes placed on top-left corner of certain hiragana/katakana that changed the sound of those basic kana. It is the voiced sound of か [ka],さ [sa], た [ta] and は [ha]-row syllables. The 'K' sound will be 'G' sound with dakuten, for example, か (Ka) will become が (Ga). The 'S' sound will be 'Z' sound with dakuten, for example, さ (Sa) will become ざ (Za). The 'T' sound will be 'D' sound with dakuten, for example, た (Ta) will become だ (Da). The 'H' sound will be 'B' sound with dakuten, for example, は (Ha) will become ば (Ba). Handakuon (。) or handakuten is a small circle placed over は [ha]- row syllables and modify the consonant pronunciation from H sounds to P sounds. All the Dakuon and Handakuon characters are listed in the above picture. Now let us make some words with the Hiragana characters that we have learnt already だけ [dake] - Only ごご [gogo] - Afternoon どこ [dok...

JLPT N5 - Lesson 3 - Hiragana Part 1

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Hiragana Keyboard The first step of your Japanese learning journey is to learn the Hiragana and Katakana characters. The Japanese writing system has 3 components which are Hiragana - 46 basic characters to write the native words. Katakana - 46 Katakana characters for writing foreign words. Kanji - Kanji are actually Chinese characters used in modern Japanese writing system used as stem of a word convey meaning of the word as well as sound. Please note that all these are characters and not alphabets. In this lesson I will introduce Hiragana and in next two lessons I will introduce Katakana and Kanji. Once you master Hiragana, Katakana will become easier to learn. Hiragana -  Each Hiragana character represents a particular syllable. First five hiragana characters 'a' 'i' 'u' 'e' 'o' represents vowel sound and only one character n represents consonant sound, remaining all characters represents a consonant-vowel sound. Here is the basic ...

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