The Japanese alphabet consists of Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji. The most used and the most common one is Hiragana.
However, the alphabet is not like the English. It has these: A (ah), i (ee), u (ooh), e (eh), and o (oh). And there are 10 sets of these.
a i u e o
a あ、い、う、え、お
k か、き、く、け、こ
s(si=shi) さ、し、す、せ、そ
t(ti=chi,tu=tsu) た、ち、つ、て、と
n な、に、ぬ、ね、の
h は、ひ、ふ、へ、ほ
m ま、み、む、め、も
y や ゆ よ
r(l sound) ら、り、る、れ、ろ
w わ を
n ん
Japanese don't use the English alphabet
If you search Google images you will find the Japanese alphabet with some English equivalents.
There is only one English alphabet, and it cannot be translated into the Japanese alphabet because there is no such thing as a Japanese alphabet. Japanese uses syllabaries and picture-symbols in its writing.
No, the letter 'z' doesn't exist in the Mayan alphabet.
z was actually thrown out of the alphabet by the greeks. When it was put back in the alphabet they just put it last.
Yes
The alphabet in Vietnamese does not have F, J, W, and Z.
There is only one English alphabet, and it cannot be translated into the Japanese alphabet because there is no such thing as a Japanese alphabet. Japanese uses syllabaries and picture-symbols in its writing.
z
'Z' is the last letter of the English Alphabet.
Actually you can't really write a to z in Japanese since the letters respond to syllables
No, the letter 'z' doesn't exist in the Mayan alphabet.
z was actually thrown out of the alphabet by the greeks. When it was put back in the alphabet they just put it last.
it is Y because if you take out Z from the whole alphabet its Y
The last letter of the German alphabet is "Z".
It's neither. Both the phrases "A-Z alphabet" and "A-Z alphabets" don't make any sense in English.
There is no such thing as a Japanese Alphabet. Japanese uses 2 syllabaries (symbols that represent whole syllables) and about 2000 Chinese characters.
The last letter of the alphabet is Z.
it is the alphabet