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hiragana

Learn Hiragana: The Ultimate Beginner's Guide (2026)

Master all 46 Japanese hiragana characters with this complete beginner guide. Includes pronunciation tips, charts, and proven memorization techniques.

Text byKanaDojo Team
Released
Updated
Levelbeginner

Welcome to your journey into Japanese! Hiragana is the foundation of the Japanese writing system, and mastering it is your first step toward fluency. In this guide, we'll cover everything you need to know to read and write hiragana confidently.

What is Hiragana?

Hiragana is one of three writing systems used in Japanese, alongside Katakana and Kanji. It consists of 46 basic characters, each representing a syllable sound. Unlike the English alphabet where letters represent individual sounds, hiragana characters represent complete syllables.

For example, the word 日本語にほんご (Japanese language) uses kanji with hiragana readings.

The Basic Hiragana Chart

Here's the complete hiragana chart with all 46 basic characters:

a
i
u
e
o
ka
ki
ku
ke
ko
sa
shi
su
se
so
ta
chi
tsu
te
to
na
ni
nu
ne
no
ha
hi
fu
he
ho
ma
mi
mu
me
mo
ya
yu
yo
ra
ri
ru
re
ro
wa
wo
n

Understanding the Structure

The hiragana system is organized in a logical pattern based on consonant-vowel combinations:

The Vowel Row

The first five characters are pure vowels:

  • あ (a) - Like "a" in "father"
  • い (i) - Like "ee" in "feet"
  • う (u) - Like "oo" in "food" but shorter
  • え (e) - Like "e" in "bed"
  • お (o) - Like "o" in "go"

Consonant Rows

Each subsequent row adds a consonant to the vowel sounds:

  • K-row: か (ka), き (ki), く (ku), け (ke), こ (ko)
  • S-row: さ (sa), し (shi), す (su), せ (se), そ (so)
  • T-row: た (ta), ち (chi), つ (tsu), て (te), と (to)
  • N-row: な (na), に (ni), ぬ (nu), ね (ne), の (no)

Dakuten and Handakuten

Beyond the basic 46 characters, hiragana includes modified characters using two diacritical marks:

Dakuten (゛)

The dakuten (two small lines) changes the sound of certain consonants:

  • K → G: か (ka) → が (ga)
  • S → Z: さ (sa) → ざ (za)
  • T → D: た (ta) → だ (da)
  • H → B: は (ha) → ば (ba)

Handakuten (゜)

The handakuten (small circle) only applies to the H-row, changing it to P:

  • H → P: は (ha) → ぱ (pa)

Here's the extended chart including dakuten and handakuten characters:

a
i
u
e
o
ka
ki
ku
ke
ko
sa
shi
su
se
so
ta
chi
tsu
te
to
na
ni
nu
ne
no
ha
hi
fu
he
ho
ma
mi
mu
me
mo
ya
yu
yo
ra
ri
ru
re
ro
wa
wo
n

Test Your Knowledge

Let's check what you've learned so far!

What is the hiragana character for 'a'?

Quiz options are unavailable for this question.

Which character represents 'shi'?

Quiz options are unavailable for this question.

What sound does が make?

Quiz options are unavailable for this question.

Memorization Tips

1. Learn in Groups

Don't try to memorize all 46 characters at once. Focus on one row at a time:

  • Day 1: Vowels (あ, い, う, え, お)
  • Day 2: K-row (か, き, く, け, こ)
  • Day 3: S-row (さ, し, す, せ, そ)
  • And so on...

2. Use Mnemonics

Create visual associations for each character. For example:

  • あ (a) - Looks like an "a"ntenna
  • き (ki) - Looks like a "key"
  • す (su) - Looks like a "swing"

3. Practice Writing

Writing by hand helps reinforce muscle memory. Pay attention to stroke order - it matters for proper character formation.

4. Read Real Content

Once you know the basics, start reading simple Japanese text. Children's books, manga with furigana, and NHK Easy News are great resources.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Confusing Similar Characters

Some hiragana look very similar. Watch out for these pairs:

  • vs - あ has a horizontal stroke at the top
  • vs - ほ has an extra horizontal line
  • vs - ね has a loop, れ doesn't
  • vs - る has a loop at the bottom

Pronunciation Pitfalls

  • ふ (fu) - Not a strong "f" sound, more like blowing air
  • ら (ra) - Between English "r" and "l"
  • ん (n) - Can sound like "n", "m", or "ng" depending on context

Practice Makes Perfect

The key to mastering hiragana is consistent practice. Here's a suggested study schedule:

WeekFocusGoal
1Vowels + K, S rowsRecognize 15 characters
2T, N, H rowsRecognize 30 characters
3M, Y, R, W rows + んRecognize all 46 characters
4Dakuten & HandakutenMaster all variations

What's Next?

Once you've mastered hiragana, you're ready to:

  1. 01Learn Katakana - Used for foreign words and emphasis
  2. 02Start basic vocabulary - Build your word bank
  3. 03Begin Kanji - The Chinese characters used in Japanese

Conclusion

Hiragana is your gateway to Japanese literacy. With 46 characters to learn, it might seem daunting at first, but with consistent practice using tools like KanaDojo, you'll be reading hiragana fluently in no time.

Start your practice now and take the first step on your Japanese learning journey!

Dossier Keywords

#hiragana#beginner#alphabet#japanese-basics

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Learn Hiragana: The Ultimate Beginner's Guide (2026) | KanaDojo