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Definition of kana in English: kananoun ˈkɑːnəˈkänə mass nounThe system of syllabic writing used for Japanese, having two forms, hiragana and katakana. Compare with kanji Example sentencesExamples - It isn't instructions, from what kana I can make out.
- Most texts incorporate both kana and kanji systems.
- We were required either to give her another name or use the kana phonetic form.
- As it is not multiple choice, it really tests your knowledge of the kana!
- Japanese writing uses Chinese characters and two native syllabic scripts (the kana: hiragana and katakana) derived from them.
- Buddhist temple coins here in Japan are inscribed with kana syllables, not kanji ideograms.
- Thus, the systematic combination of kanji and kana, and to a limited extent, of romaji in the Japanese orthography, provides rich sources for research and pedagogy.
- Japanese children with reading disabilities often have disproportionately more difficulty reading and writing kanji than kana.
- As you can see, most of the page is in the usual Japanese mixture of Chinese characters and kana.
- Each kana, as these two systems are called, is a separate phonetic syllabary and each hiragana character has a corresponding katakana character.
Definition of kana in US English: kananounˈkänə The system of syllabic writing used for Japanese, having two forms, hiragana and katakana. Compare with kanji Example sentencesExamples - It isn't instructions, from what kana I can make out.
- As it is not multiple choice, it really tests your knowledge of the kana!
- Each kana, as these two systems are called, is a separate phonetic syllabary and each hiragana character has a corresponding katakana character.
- Japanese writing uses Chinese characters and two native syllabic scripts (the kana: hiragana and katakana) derived from them.
- Most texts incorporate both kana and kanji systems.
- Japanese children with reading disabilities often have disproportionately more difficulty reading and writing kanji than kana.
- Buddhist temple coins here in Japan are inscribed with kana syllables, not kanji ideograms.
- We were required either to give her another name or use the kana phonetic form.
- Thus, the systematic combination of kanji and kana, and to a limited extent, of romaji in the Japanese orthography, provides rich sources for research and pedagogy.
- As you can see, most of the page is in the usual Japanese mixture of Chinese characters and kana.
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