Hiragana Guide for Beginners: How to Read, Write, Pronounce, and Practice ひらがな

The moment you recognize your first Japanese word written in hiragana — not transliterated into romaji, but actually reading the real Japanese script — something clicks. It feels like a door opening. That moment is closer than you think, and this guide will take you there step by step.

Hiragana (ひらがな) is the foundation of the Japanese writing system. Every beginner needs it. Every intermediate learner uses it daily. And with the right approach, you can learn all 46 base characters in one week. This guide covers everything: how to read hiragana, how to pronounce it correctly as an English speaker, how to handle tricky combinations like small っ and long vowels, how to avoid the most common mistakes, and how to practice so the characters stick for good.

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Why Hiragana Matters for Beginners

Hiragana helps you read real Japanese pronunciation

Romaji — the romanization of Japanese sounds — is a helpful training wheel for your very first day. But it is a poor guide to pronunciation. Romaji spellings like “tsu,” “shi,” and “chi” do not behave the way English speakers expect them to. Once you learn hiragana, you read Japanese sounds as they actually are, not as filtered through English spelling rules. Hiragana is a phonetic script, meaning each character always represents the same sound. There are no silent letters and no ambiguous spellings.

Hiragana appears in particles, grammar, and verb endings

Even if you plan to read advanced Japanese text full of kanji, hiragana will appear on every line. Japanese particles — the small words that mark the subject, object, and location in a sentence — are always written in hiragana. Words like は (wa), が (ga), を (wo/o), に (ni), で (de), and と (to) are pure hiragana. Verb endings, grammar patterns like 〜ている and 〜てしまう, and connecting words are also written in hiragana. You cannot read a complete Japanese sentence without hiragana.

Hiragana helps you stop relying on romaji

Romaji dependence is one of the most common problems beginners face. Learners who stay in romaji too long develop habits that are hard to break: they mentally “translate” Japanese text into English letters before reading it, which slows them down enormously. Learners who switch to hiragana early read Japanese more naturally and progress much faster. The goal is to see ありがとう and immediately think “arigatou” — not to see a romaji word first. Hiragana breaks the mental detour.

Hiragana unlocks beginner reading practice

Many beginner Japanese resources — graded readers, children’s books, hiragana-only passages — are written entirely in hiragana. Once you can read hiragana, you can start reading real material immediately. Even if you do not know every kanji, words in Japanese dictionaries include hiragana readings (called furigana, 振り仮名(ふりがな)) above or beside kanji so you can always confirm pronunciation. Hiragana is the key to accessing all of this.

What you can do after learning hiragana

After mastering hiragana, your next steps open up: you can begin learning katakana (which shares the same sounds but uses different character shapes), start recognizing high-frequency kanji with their hiragana readings, follow along with Japanese audio while reading transcripts, and tackle JLPT N5-level vocabulary and grammar. Hiragana is not a stepping stone you pass through quickly and forget — it is a permanent, essential skill you will use for the rest of your Japanese learning journey.

How to Use This Hiragana Guide

If you are learning Japanese from zero

Start at the beginning and work through each section in order. Read the character tables aloud as you go. Do not rush to memorize every character on the first pass — read through the tables, say each sound out loud, then come back and review. The 7-Day Learning Plan at the end of this article gives you a structured schedule.

If you already know some romaji

You have a head start on the sounds. Your job now is to connect the sounds you already know to the hiragana characters that represent them. Focus on the basic character charts and spend extra time on the pronunciation section — particularly the four exceptions (し, ち, つ, ふ) that do not match simple romaji logic.

If you want to read Japanese words

Jump to the Basic Hiragana Chart section, study the example words in each table, and then go straight to the How to Practice Reading Hiragana section. Focus on reading words as whole units rather than sounding out letter by letter. The Similar-Looking Characters section will help you avoid reading errors with common confusable pairs.

If you want to write hiragana by hand

Read the How to Write Hiragana section carefully. The most important points: stroke order creates natural-looking characters, and you should not try to perfect handwriting before you have achieved reading fluency. Read first, write second.

If you want to practice pronunciation

Go directly to the Hiragana Pronunciation for English Speakers section. Pay special attention to the Japanese vowel section — this is where most English speakers pick up habits that are difficult to correct later. Then work through the Dakuten section and the Combination Sounds section for a complete picture.

The Basic Hiragana Chart

Below is the complete table of all 46 base hiragana characters, followed by detailed rows with example words. Each character in hiragana always represents exactly one syllable sound (or in the case of ん, a single nasal sound). There are no exceptions to this rule for the base characters.

aiueo
k
s
t
n
h
m
y
r
w
n

あ, い, う, え, お (vowels)

The five vowels are the most important characters to learn first. Every other hiragana syllable is built from these vowel sounds combined with a consonant. Pronounce each vowel as a short, clean sound — no gliding, no diphthongs, no lengthening at the end.

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
aあさ (asa)morning
iいぬ (inu)dog
uうみ (umi)sea / ocean
eえき (eki)train station
oおかね (okane)money

⚠ Pronunciation note: Japanese “a” sounds like the “a” in “father,” not the “a” in “cat.” Japanese “i” is like the “ee” in “see” but shorter. Japanese “u” is unrounded — your lips should not be pursed. Japanese “e” is like the “e” in “bed.” Japanese “o” is like the “o” in “note” but without the gliding “w” sound at the end.

🎯 Practice next: Write each vowel 10 times. Then look at objects around you and try to say the Japanese word for them, starting with the vowel sounds: あお (ao = blue), いえ (ie = house), うえ (ue = above).

か, き, く, け, こ

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
kaかさ (kasa)umbrella
kiきもち (kimochi)feeling / emotion
kuくに (kuni)country
keけが (kega)injury
koこども (kodomo)child

⚠ Pronunciation note: The “k” sound in Japanese is not aspirated as strongly as in English. Think of the softer “k” in “skill” rather than the puffier “k” in “kill.” This subtlety matters more as you advance.

🎯 Practice next: Say these words aloud: かお (kao = face), こえ (koe = voice), いけ (ike = pond). Notice how the vowels from the previous row combine cleanly with the consonant.

さ, し, す, せ, そ

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
saさくら (sakura)cherry blossom
shiしろ (shiro)white / castle
suすし (sushi)sushi
seせかい (sekai)world
soそら (sora)sky

⚠ Pronunciation note: し is “shi” (like the “she” in “sheep”), NOT “si.” This is one of the four major exceptions in hiragana pronunciation. The “sh” sound is soft and natural — do not overthink it. す (su) is also slightly special: in casual speech, the “u” in す is often devoiced (whispered or nearly silent), so すし can sound close to “s’shi.”

🎯 Practice next: Read these words: あさ (morning), かさ (umbrella), そこ (there), すき (like). Notice し appears in many everyday words.

た, ち, つ, て, と

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
taたべる (taberu)to eat
chiちかく (chikaku)nearby
tsuつき (tsuki)moon / month
teてがみ (tegami)letter (written)
toとけい (tokei)clock / watch

⚠ Pronunciation note: This row has two major exceptions. ち is “chi” (like in “cheese”), NOT “ti.” つ is “tsu” — a sound that does not exist naturally in English. To practice it, say “cats” and then just say the very end: “ts” + “u.” Do it slowly: “ca-TSU.” It takes practice, but it will become natural. These two characters trip up many beginners who try to apply standard romaji logic.

🎯 Practice next: Repeat these words slowly: つき (moon), ちず (chizu = map), てんき (tenki = weather). Pay attention to the “ts” and “ch” sounds.

な, に, ぬ, ね, の

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
naなまえ (namae)name
niにほん (nihon)Japan
nuぬの (nuno)cloth / fabric
neねこ (neko)cat
noの (no)possessive particle

⚠ Pronunciation note: All five na-row characters are straightforward. の (no) is the most grammatically important one — it is the possessive particle that works like “‘s” in English (わたしの = “my / mine”). You will see it constantly. Also note that ぬ and ね look slightly similar to each other and to other characters like め and れ — this is covered in the Similar-Looking Characters section.

🎯 Practice next: Say these particle phrases: にほんの (of Japan), ねこの (the cat’s), わたしのなまえ (my name).

は, ひ, ふ, へ, ほ

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
haはな (hana)flower / nose
hiひと (hito)person
fuふゆ (fuyu)winter
heへや (heya)room
hoほし (hoshi)star

⚠ Pronunciation note: ふ (fu) is the fourth major exception. It is NOT “hu” as the romaji might suggest. It is a soft bilabial fricative — not quite English “f” (which touches upper teeth to lower lip) and not quite English “h.” Think of blowing on a candle gently: “fu.” は (ha) is straightforward, but watch for a grammar exception: when は is used as the topic particle, it is pronounced “wa,” not “ha.” Similarly, へ as the direction particle is pronounced “e,” not “he.”

🎯 Practice next: Read aloud: はな (flower), ふゆ (winter), ほんや (hon’ya = bookstore). Try to produce the soft ふ sound — not a hard English “f.”

ま, み, む, め, も

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
maまち (machi)town
miみず (mizu)water
muむし (mushi)insect / bug
meめがね (megane)glasses (eyewear)
moもり (mori)forest

⚠ Pronunciation note: The m-row is consistent and matches English expectations closely. Watch out for the visual similarity between め and ぬ — beginners frequently mix these up. The key difference: め has a loop that turns left; ぬ has a loop that curls further down and right.

🎯 Practice next: Read these: まいにち (mainichi = every day), みんな (minna = everyone), もっと (motto = more). The last word will teach you the small っ concept covered later.

や, ゆ, よ

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
yaやま (yama)mountain
yuゆき (yuki)snow
yoよる (yoru)night

⚠ Pronunciation note: The ya-row has only three characters — the “yi” and “ye” positions do not exist in modern Japanese. These three characters also serve as the small combination characters (ゃ, ゅ, ょ) used to form sounds like きゃ, しゅ, and ちょ — that combination system is covered in its own section below.

🎯 Practice next: Read: やすい (yasui = cheap / easy), ゆうべ (yuube = last night), よやく (yoyaku = reservation).

ら, り, る, れ, ろ

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
raらいねん (rainen)next year
riりょうり (ryouri)cooking / cuisine
ruるす (rusu)absence from home
reれいぞうこ (reizouko)refrigerator
roろうか (rouka)hallway / corridor

⚠ Pronunciation note: The Japanese “r” sound is unlike English “r” or “l.” It is a quick flap of the tongue tip against the ridge just behind the upper front teeth — similar to the fast “d” or “r” in the American English word “butter” or “ladder.” Your tongue does not curl back (as in English “r”) and does not stay long (as in English “l”). It is a single light tap. This takes practice — see the dedicated section on the Japanese R sound below. Also note the visual similarity between る and ろ — covered in the Similar-Looking Characters section.

🎯 Practice next: Slowly say: ら-り-る-れ-ろ five times. Listen to a native speaker audio source and mimic the flap sound. Then try: りんご (ringo = apple), れきし (rekishi = history).

わ, を, ん

HiraganaRomajiExample Word / UseMeaning / Function
waわたし (watashi)I / me
wo / oりんごをたべるobject-marking particle
nにほん (nihon)Japan (note the ん at the end)

⚠ Pronunciation note: を (wo) is technically “wo” in romaji but in modern spoken Japanese it is almost always pronounced as a plain “o” — identical to お. It functions only as the direct object particle (marking the object of a verb). You will never use を to write normal words — it appears only as a particle. ん is a special character: it is a syllable by itself (taking up one beat of time), but it represents only a nasal sound with no vowel. Its exact sound shifts depending on what comes after it: more “n” before t/d/n, more “m” before p/b/m, more “ng” before k/g, and a sort of nasal vowel at the end of words or before vowels.

🎯 Practice next: Spot ん in these words: にほん (Japan), でんしゃ (densha = train), みんな (minna = everyone), ほんや (hon’ya = bookstore). Notice how ん always takes one full beat of time.

Hiragana Pronunciation for English Speakers

Japanese vowels are short and clean (a, i, u, e, o — no diphthongs)

English vowels are long and gliding. When an English speaker says “no,” the “o” slides toward “w” at the end: “no-w.” When they say “say,” the “a” glides toward “y”: “sa-y.” Japanese vowels do not do this. They are pure, short, and steady. The “o” in こ stays “o” the whole time. The “e” in け stays “e” the whole time. This is one of the most important habits to build early. If you let your English vowel habits carry over into Japanese, your speech will sound noticeably foreign and can sometimes cause misunderstanding.

Also important: Japanese vowels can be long or short, and that distinction changes meaning. おばさん (obasan) means “aunt” while おばあさん (obaasan) means “grandmother.” The difference is one extra beat on the “a.” More on this in the Long Vowels section below.

し, ち, つ, ふ — the four exceptions

These four characters are called “exceptions” not because they are irregular in Japanese, but because their romaji spellings do not behave the way English speakers expect them to. Learning these four early prevents ingrained mispronunciation.

CharacterRomajiSounds likeNOT like
shi“she” (soft sh)“see” (hard s)
chi“chee” (soft ch)“tee” (hard t)
tsu“ts” + short “u”“too” or “sue”
fusoft bilabial blowhard English “f”

For つ: the hardest part for English speakers is that there is no common English word starting with “ts.” Practice by saying “cats” and removing the “ca” so only “ts” remains, then adding a short “u”: “tsu.” Repeat until it flows naturally.

The Japanese R sound in ら, り, る, れ, ろ

The Japanese R (romanized as r) is technically an alveolar flap — the same sound as the quick “d” or “t” in the middle of American English words like “butter,” “ladder,” or “water” said quickly. Your tongue tip flaps against the alveolar ridge (the bumpy area just behind your upper front teeth) once and moves away immediately. It does not roll (like a Spanish “r”), does not stay in contact (like an English “l”), and does not curl back (like an English “r”).

The best practice method: say the American English phrase “a little” very quickly and focus on the “tt” sound. That fast tap is close to the Japanese R. Then try り (ri), る (ru), ら (ra) with that same tap. It will feel unnatural at first, but it becomes automatic with enough repetition.

を in modern Japanese

Historically, を was pronounced “wo” (with a “w” sound at the start). In modern spoken Japanese, that “w” sound has completely disappeared. を is now pronounced exactly the same as お — a plain “o.” The character を appears only as a grammatical particle (the direct object marker). You will never encounter を in the middle of a regular Japanese word. When you see it, just read it as “o.”

ん — the standalone nasal

ん is unique among hiragana: it has no vowel sound, and it can stand alone as a syllable (one mora — one beat). It always takes up exactly one beat of time, just like any other hiragana character. Its precise pronunciation shifts slightly based on the following sound, but for beginners, producing any nasal sound in that position is sufficient. The important thing is to give it its own beat: に-ほ-ん is three beats, not two.

Note: ん can never start a Japanese word — it only appears in the middle or at the end.

Common pronunciation mistakes and how to fix them (table: wrong → correct)

MistakeExample of mistakeCorrect versionFix
Gliding vowels“ko-w” for こShort “ko”Cut the vowel short — no glide
Saying “si” for し“si-ro” for しろ“shi-ro”Use the “sh” from “shop”
Saying “ti” for ち“ti-zu” for ちず“chi-zu”Use the “ch” from “cheese”
Saying “tu” for つ“tu-ki” for つき“tsu-ki”Practice “cats” → “ts” + “u”
Hard English “f” for ふSharp “fu” for ふSoft bilabial “fu”Blow gently, no teeth contact
English R for ら rowCurled R for りFlap RTap tongue once — do not curl
Skipping ん beat“nihon” as 2 beats3 beats: に-ほ-んCount morae (beats) carefully
Short long vowels“obasan” for おばあさん“obaasan” (longer a)Hold the second vowel one extra beat

Dakuten and Handakuten (Voiced and Semi-voiced Sounds)

Dakuten (濁点(だくてん)) are the two small marks ( ゛ ) added to the upper right corner of certain hiragana characters to create voiced versions. Handakuten (半濁点(はんだくてん)) are the small circles ( ゜ ) added to the h-row to create the p-sounds. Together, these marks add 25 more sounds to the hiragana system.

が, ぎ, ぐ, げ, ご

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
gaがっこう (gakkou)school
giぎんこう (ginkou)bank
guぐあい (guai)condition / feeling
geげんき (genki)healthy / energetic
goごはん (gohan)rice / meal

The g-row is the voiced version of the k-row. か→が, き→ぎ, く→ぐ, け→げ, こ→ご — same consonant position, now voiced. The two dakuten marks ゛ signal that you voice the consonant — the same consonant position, but now with vibration in your vocal cords.

ざ, じ, ず, ぜ, ぞ

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
zaざっし (zasshi)magazine
jiじかん (jikan)time
zuずっと (zutto)all along / always
zeぜんぶ (zenbu)everything / all
zoぞう (zou)elephant

⚠ Note on じ: Just as し in the s-row is “shi,” its voiced counterpart じ is “ji” (like the “j” in “jeep”), not “zi.” This is the same category of exception as し → じ.

だ, ぢ, づ, で, ど

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
daだいがく (daigaku)university
di / jiはなぢ (hanaji)nosebleed
du / zuつづく (tsuzuku)to continue
deでんしゃ (densha)train
doどこ (doko)where

⚠ Special note on ぢ and づ: These two characters are pronounced identically to じ and ず in modern standard Japanese. They exist for historical and grammatical reasons (showing word origins), but you will almost never need to write them — they appear in just a handful of specific words.

ば, び, ぶ, べ, ぼ

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
baばしょ (basho)place / location
biびじゅつ (bijutsu)fine art
buぶんか (bunka)culture
beべんきょう (benkyou)study
boぼうし (boushi)hat / cap

ぱ, ぴ, ぷ, ぺ, ぽ

HiraganaRomajiExample WordMeaning
paぱっと (patto)suddenly / in a flash
piぴったり (pittari)exactly / perfectly fitting
puぷりぷり (puripuri)springy / plump texture
peぺん (pen)pen
poぽかぽか (pokapoka)warm and cozy

The p-row uses the handakuten circle ゜ instead of dakuten marks. It is the semi-voiced version of the h-row (は, ひ, ふ, へ, ほ → ぱ, ぴ, ぷ, ぺ, ぽ). P-sounds in hiragana mostly appear in loanwords and onomatopoeia (sound words).

Why じ/ぢ and ず/づ confuse learners

Both じ and ぢ are pronounced “ji.” Both ず and づ are pronounced “zu.” The distinction is purely orthographic (spelling-based), not phonetic. In modern Japanese, じ is used in the vast majority of cases. ぢ and づ appear only in specific words — mainly compound words where the second element begins with ち or つ and the voiced version is needed. For example: はなぢ (nosebleed, from はな + ち) and つづく (to continue, from つ + づく). As a beginner, you do not need to worry about writing ぢ and づ — just be able to read them as “ji” and “zu.”

Small ゃ, ゅ, ょ — Combination Sounds

In addition to the base hiragana and dakuten variations, there is a system of combination sounds formed by pairing an i-column character (き, し, ち, に, ひ, み, り, ぎ, じ, び, ぴ) with a small version of や, ゆ, or よ. These small characters (ゃ, ゅ, ょ) are written smaller than normal and are read as a single syllable — one beat — together with the preceding character.

きゃ, きゅ, きょ

CombinationRomajiExample WordMeaning
きゃkyaきゃく (kyaku)guest / customer
きゅkyuきゅうり (kyuuri)cucumber
きょkyoきょう (kyou)today

しゃ, しゅ, しょ

CombinationRomajiExample WordMeaning
しゃshaしゃしん (shashin)photograph
しゅshuしゅみ (shumi)hobby
しょshoしょくじ (shokuji)meal / dining

ちゃ, ちゅ, ちょ

CombinationRomajiExample WordMeaning
ちゃchaおちゃ (ocha)tea
ちゅchuちゅうい (chuui)caution / attention
ちょchoちょっと (chotto)a little / just a moment

にゃ, にゅ, にょ

CombinationRomajiExample WordMeaning
にゃnyaにゃんこ (nyanko)kitty (affectionate)
にゅnyuにゅうがく (nyuugaku)school enrollment
にょnyoにょうぼう (nyoubou)wife (old/literary)

ひゃ, ひゅ, ひょ and beyond

The combination system extends to all i-column characters, including the dakuten versions. Below is a compact reference for the remaining combinations:

CombinationRomajiExampleMeaning
ひゃhyaひゃく (hyaku)100 (one hundred)
みゃmyaみゃく (myaku)pulse / vein
りゃryaりゃく (ryaku)abbreviation
ぎゃgyaぎゃく (gyaku)opposite / reverse
じゃjaじゃ (ja)well then (casual)
びゃbyaびゃく (byaku)white (old/literary)
ぴゃpyaぴゃっと (pyatto)in a flash (onomatopoeia)

Common mistake: reading small や/ゆ/よ as full-size kana

The most common mistake with combination sounds is treating the small ゃ, ゅ, or ょ as a separate full syllable. This is wrong. きゃ is ONE syllable (one beat), not two. A beginner who reads きゃく as “ki-ya-ku” (three beats) instead of “kya-ku” (two beats) will be misunderstood and will have difficulty recognizing the word when a native speaker says it correctly.

The key visual rule: if や, ゆ, or よ appears in its small form (lower, smaller than the other characters), it combines with the character before it into one syllable. If they appear in their normal full size, they are their own syllable. Compare: きやく (ki-ya-ku = three syllables, “ki-ya-ku”) vs. きゃく (kya-ku = two syllables, “guest”). Size matters.

Small っ — Double Consonants

What small っ does

The small っ (called sokuon, 促音(そくおん)) doubles the consonant that follows it. It represents a brief pause — a moment where the airflow stops before the following consonant releases. Unlike the small ゃ, ゅ, ょ which change the sound, small っ creates a timed pause. It takes up exactly one full beat of time, but that beat is silence — a held tension before the consonant explodes.

How to pause before the next consonant

Think of it this way: your mouth forms the shape of the upcoming consonant, and you hold it for one beat before releasing. For きって (kitte = postage stamp): your mouth shapes the “t,” holds for one beat, then releases: “kit-te.” The closure is real and audible. Native speakers will hear the difference between き-て and きって clearly, and the meanings are completely different.

きて vs きって (meaning difference)

WordRomajiBeatsMeaning
きてkite2 beats (ki-te)Please come (te-form of くる)
きってkitte3 beats (ki-[pause]-te)Postage stamp

If you say きて when you mean きって, you are asking someone to “come” instead of talking about a stamp. The small っ is not optional decoration — it is a meaningful part of the word.

さか vs さっか

WordRomajiMeaning
さかsakaslope / hill
さっかsakkaauthor / writer

Again, one small character changes the meaning entirely. These minimal pairs are common in Japanese and they show why accurate mora timing matters.

Why small っ matters for meaning

Japanese is a mora-timed language, meaning every beat takes roughly equal time. The small っ takes up one mora of time — a beat that is held, not voiced. Skipping that beat does not just make you sound slightly off — it can completely change what you are saying. Common words with small っ include: ちょっと (chotto = a little), きって (kitte = stamp), ざっし (zasshi = magazine), がっこう (gakkou = school), and もっと (motto = more).

Listening and speaking practice tip

To train your ear for small っ, listen to pairs of words with and without it (like きて vs きって) and try to clap once per mora. If you hear きって as three claps — ki / [pause] / tte — you have got the rhythm. Record yourself saying words with small っ and compare to native audio. The pause should feel natural, not forced, after enough practice.

Long Vowels in Hiragana

A long vowel in Japanese is simply a vowel held for two beats instead of one. The first beat establishes the vowel, and the second beat extends it. In hiragana, long vowels are usually written by adding another hiragana character that continues the vowel sound.

ああ, いい, うう

The a, i, and u long vowels are written by simply doubling the vowel character: ああ (aa), いい (ii), うう (uu). Examples: おかあさん (okaasan = mother), おにいさん (oniisan = older brother), くうき (kuuki = air / atmosphere). In each case, the doubled vowel is held for two full beats.

えい and ええ

The long e sound is most commonly written with えい (ei), not ええ (ee), though both appear. In modern spoken Japanese, えい is usually pronounced as a long “ee” sound (not as two separate vowels “e” + “i”). Examples: えいご (eigo = English language), せんせい (sensei = teacher). You might see ええ (ee) in conversational expressions like ええ (ee = yes, expressing agreement) or おねえさん (oneesan = older sister).

おう and おお

The long o sound is written either as おう (ou) or おお (oo). おう is far more common and is pronounced as a long “oo” sound in modern speech: おとうさん (otousan = father), ありがとう (arigatou = thank you), とうきょう (toukyou = Tokyo). おお appears in a smaller number of words: おおきい (ookii = big), おおい (ooi = many). Both sound the same when spoken — a long “oo” held for two beats.

おばさん vs おばあさん (meaning changes with length)

WordRomajiBeatsMeaning
おばさんobasan4 beats: o-ba-sa-naunt / middle-aged woman
おばあさんobaasan5 beats: o-ba-a-sa-ngrandmother / elderly woman
おじさんojisan4 beats: o-ji-sa-nuncle / middle-aged man
おじいさんojiisan5 beats: o-ji-i-sa-ngrandfather / elderly man

Calling someone’s grandmother おばさん instead of おばあさん is a meaningful mistake — you have effectively called her “middle-aged” when the family intends “grandmother.” Long vowel length carries real semantic weight.

Common mistake: making long vowels too short

English speakers tend to compress long vowels because English vowel length is not phonemically distinctive in the same way. In Japanese, you must hold the second beat. A practical trick: tap your finger twice when you hit a long vowel — once for the first beat, once for the extension. ありがとう (a-ri-ga-to-u) is five beats, with the last beat being the extended “o.” Practice until holding that extra beat feels natural.

Similar-Looking Characters to Watch Out For

Several hiragana characters are visually similar, especially to beginners. Confusing these characters can make reading frustrating and lead to systematic errors. The solution is not just to look harder — it is to build specific visual memory hooks for each pair.

は vs ほ

CharacterRomajiKey visual featureMemory hook
haTwo vertical strokes, the second curves outは has an “arm reaching out” — like saying “ha!” with your arm out
hoSame base + a small extra loop on the rightほ has an extra “ho-hoop” loop

ぬ vs め

CharacterRomajiKey visual featureMemory hook
nuLoop curls down and wraps to the right, then exits downwardぬ looks like “noodles” looping around
meLoop tightens into a small closed eye shapeめ looks like an “eye” (目, me = eye)

ね vs れ vs わ

CharacterRomajiKey visual featureMemory hook
neHas a loop that closes and then curls right with a tailね looks like a cat sleeping (ねこ = cat)
reSimilar shape but the tail goes left then curls underれ has a tail that “reverses” left
waNo loop at all — just a vertical stroke and a curveわ is “open” — like an open window (wa = Japan’s traditional name)

る vs ろ

CharacterRomajiKey visual featureMemory hook
ruHas a loop that closes and a tail that curlsる looks like a lasso (loop + tail)
roHas the same loop but NO tail — ends flatろ is “round” with a “road” that ends flat

き vs さ (for beginners)

CharacterRomajiKey visual featureMemory hook
kiHas a top horizontal line that crosses through two vertical lines, plus a fourth stroke that goes down-right. Usually connected at the top.き looks like a “key” (ki = key in some mnemonics)
saHas two strokes that cross, but the overall shape is more open and wider. No fourth stroke.さ looks like the number “5” lying down

How to create visual memory hooks

The most effective method for remembering confusable pairs is to create a distinct visual story for each character. The Tofugu “WaniKani” approach uses elaborate mnemonics — a character looks like something, and you build a mini story around it. You do not need someone else’s mnemonic: any association that you personally find vivid will work better than a generic one. When you confuse two characters, stop and ask: “What does this one have that the other does not?” Name that feature explicitly. The act of noticing and naming the difference is more powerful than just looking at the character more often.

How to Write Hiragana

Why stroke order matters

Stroke order — the sequence in which you draw the lines of each character — matters for two reasons. First, it produces natural-looking characters. Hiragana was derived from cursive Chinese characters, so the strokes flow in a specific direction that creates the recognizable shape. If you draw strokes in the wrong order, the character often looks slightly off in ways that are hard to pinpoint. Second, stroke order makes writing faster once you have internalized it, because the pen naturally flows from one stroke to the next.

For basic hiragana, the general rules are: write top to bottom, left to right. Horizontal strokes usually come before vertical strokes that cross them. Enclosing strokes usually come last. For specific characters, look up stroke diagrams from a trusted source (JLPT Sensei, Tofugu, or NHK World all provide free stroke order charts).

How to practice without obsessing over handwriting

A useful ratio for beginners: spend 70% of your practice time reading and 30% writing. Writing reinforces memory, but perfect handwriting is not your goal at this stage — recognition and reading fluency are. Use graph paper or hiragana practice sheets (freely available online) with faint guide characters to trace. After tracing, try writing from memory, then check your result against the reference. The goal is “recognizable and correctly ordered,” not calligraphically perfect.

Basic writing tips for beginners

Write each character large at first — about 2 cm square. Small writing makes it harder to control stroke direction. Use a fine ballpoint or pencil (not a thick marker) so you can see stroke details. Write slowly and deliberately at first; speed comes after shape is correct. Practice one row per session, writing each character 10–20 times. Do not mix all the rows at once in early sessions — focused practice on small groups builds stronger memory faster.

Do not aim for perfect handwriting too early

Many beginners spend too much time trying to make their hiragana look like a textbook font. This is counterproductive. Your handwriting will naturally improve as you write more. For now, prioritize: (1) correct stroke order, (2) correct proportions (relative size of parts), and (3) distinguishability (your は should look different from your ほ). Beauty comes with time and mileage.

How to Practice Reading Hiragana

Read kana in rows first

Start by reading across each row of the hiragana chart from left to right: あ-い-う-え-お, か-き-く-け-こ, and so on. Saying the sounds aloud while reading reinforces the connection between the visual symbol and the sound. Do this for each row until you can read across it without hesitating. This usually takes 1–3 passes per row.

Read random kana next

Once you know each row in order, shuffle the order. Either use a random hiragana quiz app (Real Kana, Kana Quiz, or similar free tools) or write characters on index cards and shuffle them. The goal is to read each character in isolation without the “next in the row” cue. This is where real recognition builds. Aim for under 1 second per character before moving to word reading.

Read simple words

Once you can read individual characters reasonably quickly, start reading two- and three-character words. Examples: ねこ (neko = cat), いぬ (inu = dog), さかな (sakana = fish), くるま (kuruma = car), みず (mizu = water). Read each word as a unit — two beats for ねこ, three beats for さかな. Do not sound out each character separately — that is the romaji habit in disguise. Try to connect directly: shape → sound → meaning.

Read short phrases

Progress from words to short phrases that include particles and grammar: これはねこです (kore wa neko desu = This is a cat), あめがふっています (ame ga futte imasu = It is raining). At this stage, you are practicing reading flow — keeping up a steady pace across a phrase without stopping at each character. Even if you do not know all the grammar yet, reading the characters fluently is its own skill worth developing.

Read particles in real sentences

Since hiragana particles are among the most frequent elements in Japanese text, practice spotting は, が, を, に, で, と as you read. These single characters appear constantly. As your reading speed increases, particles will serve as visual anchors — you will see them immediately and know where the grammatical units are, even before you fully understand the surrounding words.

Stop translating kana into romaji

This is the most important reading habit to build: do not use romaji as a stepping stone. When you see あ, the goal is to immediately think “a” — not to first think “that looks like romaji a” and then decode it. When you see ねこ, the goal is “neko” → “cat” as a direct visual-to-meaning connection. The romaji detour burns mental energy and slows your reading dramatically. Every time you catch yourself mentally writing out romaji, stop, look at the kana directly, and say the sound again without going through the alphabet. This habit forms quickly with consistent practice.

Yuka

Look at this word: ねこ. Without thinking in romaji, what does it mean?

Rei

Cat! I read it directly — ね-こ, neko, cat. I did not even think about romaji this time!

7-Day Hiragana Learning Plan

This plan assumes 20–30 minutes of focused study per day. Adjust the pace if you want to spread it over two weeks — the important thing is consistency, not speed.

Day 1 — Vowels and か/さ rows

Study the five vowels (あいうえお) until you can write and say them from memory. Then learn the ka-row (かきくけこ) and sa-row (さしすせそ). Pay extra attention to し = “shi.” Read and write each character 10 times. End by reading these words: あか (aka = red), くさ (kusa = grass), さかな (sakana = fish), いく (iku = to go).

Day 2 — た/な/は rows

Learn た-ち-つ-て-と (pay attention to ち = “chi” and つ = “tsu”), な-に-ぬ-ね-の, and は-ひ-ふ-へ-ほ (pay attention to ふ = soft “fu”). Review Day 1 characters for 5 minutes first. End the session by reading: たべもの (tabemono = food), にほん (nihon = Japan), ほんや (hon’ya = bookstore), ちかてつ (chikatetsu = subway).

Day 3 — ま/や/ら/わ rows

Learn ま-み-む-め-も, や-ゆ-よ, ら-り-る-れ-ろ (practice the flap R sound), and わ-を-ん. Review Days 1–2 for 5 minutes. End by reading: みんな (minna = everyone), ゆうき (yuuki = courage), わたし (watashi = I), でんしゃ (densha = train). At this point you have covered all 46 base characters.

Day 4 — Dakuten and handakuten

Learn the voiced versions: が行, ざ行, だ行, ば行, and the semi-voiced ぱ行. Focus on the pattern: adding ゛ voices the consonant. Practice reading: げんき (genki = energetic), じかん (jikan = time), でんわ (denwa = telephone), ぼうし (boushi = hat), ぱーてぃー (paatii = party). Review all base characters for 5 minutes.

Day 5 — Small ゃ, ゅ, ょ and small っ

Learn the combination sounds (きゃ, しゃ, ちゃ, etc.) and the sokuon (small っ). The key rules: small kana = combine into one syllable; small っ = hold a beat before the next consonant. Practice pairs: きて vs きって, さか vs さっか. Read: しゃしん (shashin = photograph), がっこう (gakkou = school), ちょっと (chotto = a little), しゅみ (shumi = hobby).

Day 6 — Long vowels and word reading

Study the long vowel patterns (aa, ii, uu, ei/ee, ou/oo). Practice the meaning-changing pairs: おばさん vs おばあさん, おじさん vs おじいさん. Then do extended word reading: try reading a short hiragana-only passage or a list of 20 common words without looking at romaji. Test yourself: cover the meaning column of any table in this article and read the words cold.

Day 7 — Full review and quiz

No new material today. Take the quiz at the end of this article. Then use a random hiragana quiz app and aim for 46/46 in under 3 minutes. Write out the full hiragana chart from memory (without looking). If you miss any, go back to that row’s table and review for 5 more minutes. By the end of Day 7, you should be able to read any hiragana text at a slow-but-confident pace. Celebrate — this is a real milestone.

Hiragana Mastery Checklist

Use this checklist to honestly assess where you are. Each item represents a real skill, not just knowledge. Be honest with yourself — checking a box before you have truly achieved it only delays real progress.

Can you recognize all basic hiragana?

✅ You can look at any of the 46 base hiragana characters and immediately know the sound it represents, without needing to look it up. Test yourself with a randomized kana quiz — if you score 100% consistently, you have this skill.

Can you read random hiragana without romaji?

✅ You can read a list of hiragana characters in any order without mentally translating them to romaji first. The sound comes directly from the shape. This is different from recognizing in order — scramble your flashcards and test again if you are unsure.

Can you read simple words?

✅ You can read two- and three-character hiragana words smoothly, including words with long vowels, small っ, and combination sounds. Try reading all the example words in this article without looking at the romaji. If you can read them all within two seconds each, you are there.

Can you hear long vowels and small っ?

✅ You can distinguish おばさん from おばあさん by ear. You can hear the pause in きって vs きて. This is a listening skill as much as a reading skill. Test yourself with minimal pairs in Japanese audio (look up minimal pair practice on YouTube or forvo.com).

Can you write the basic characters from memory?

✅ You can write all 46 base hiragana characters from memory with correct stroke order and proportions. Cover the chart and write out all five rows, including the ya-row (3 characters) and the wa-wo-n set. Check your result against the chart in this article.

Are you ready to learn katakana?

✅ If you can check all five boxes above honestly, you are ready for katakana. Katakana represents the same sounds as hiragana — it is a parallel set of 46 characters used for loanwords, foreign names, onomatopoeia, and emphasis. Because you already know the sounds, learning katakana is faster than learning hiragana was. See the recommended articles at the end of this guide for where to start.

Common Hiragana Mistakes English Speakers Make

Staying in romaji too long

❌ The mistake: spending weeks studying Japanese while still reading everything in romaji. Many textbooks and apps (including Duolingo in its early stages) delay the introduction of kana, which reinforces romaji as the “real” representation of Japanese. It is not. Japanese does not use romaji naturally — native speakers write in kana and kanji. The longer you stay in romaji, the longer the detour you have to unlearn. ✅ The fix: switch to hiragana-only reading as soon as you know the basic characters, even if it is slow. Slow hiragana is better than fast romaji.

Reading vowels like English

❌ The mistake: pronouncing Japanese vowels with English values. Saying “eye” for い, “oh-w” for お, “ay” for え, or “oo-w” for う with the lips rounded. ✅ The fix: practice each vowel in isolation until it is clean and short. Record yourself and compare to a native speaker. The differences are small but they accumulate into a noticeably foreign accent if not corrected early.

Ignoring small っ

❌ The mistake: reading きって as “kite” or もっと as “moto” — skipping the pause as if small っ were not there. ✅ The fix: whenever you see small っ, consciously hold the pause for one full beat before the next consonant. Repeat the word several times with the pause until it feels normal. The pause is part of the word.

Ignoring long vowels

❌ The mistake: reading おばあさん as if it had the same vowel length as おばさん, or pronouncing ありがとう as four beats instead of five. ✅ The fix: whenever you see a doubled vowel or an -ou/-ei combination, count the mora. If the word has five beats, give it five beats. Use the “tap your finger” technique to build the habit.

Confusing similar characters

❌ The mistake: misreading ぬ as め, or ろ as る, or ね as れ consistently. This is normal in early learning — the characters genuinely look alike. But if you never address the confusion directly, you will continue making the same errors for months. ✅ The fix: when you confuse two characters, stop and spend 2 minutes specifically on that pair. Identify the exact visual difference. Make a memory hook. Write both characters side by side 10 times while saying the sounds aloud. Do not move on until you can tell them apart reliably.

Trying to master handwriting before reading

❌ The mistake: spending most study time on beautiful handwriting while reading fluency lags behind. Some learners fill entire notebooks with perfectly formed hiragana but still cannot read a Japanese sentence at normal speed. ✅ The fix: reading fluency comes first. Write enough to reinforce memory (10–20 times per character in early study), then move on. Return to handwriting practice once you can read all kana quickly — at that stage, your writing will improve naturally alongside your reading.

Hiragana Quiz and Practice

Test yourself with these questions. Read the hiragana and answer before checking the solutions. Cover the answers with your hand or a piece of paper and answer aloud for best results.

Basic character recognition quiz (5 questions with answers)

For each hiragana, write the romaji pronunciation and a word that uses it:

QuestionHiraganaAnswer (romaji)Example word
1fuふゆ (fuyu = winter)
2chiちず (chizu = map)
3noの (no = possessive particle)
4roろうか (rouka = hallway)
5o (or wo)りんごをたべる (direct object particle)

Dakuten quiz (3 questions)

What sound does each dakuten character make?

QuestionCharacterAnswer (romaji)Example word
1zoぞう (zou = elephant)
2piぴったり (pittari = exactly right)
3buぶんか (bunka = culture)

Similar characters quiz (3 questions)

Identify which character is which:

QuestionCharacter ACharacter BWhich is ぬ (nu)?
1A (ぬ has a longer loop that exits downward)
2Neither — both are in the r-row. ろ = ro, る = ru
3Neither is ぬ. ね = ne (cat shape), れ = re (tail goes left)

Simple word reading quiz (5 words)

Read each word aloud, then check the answer:

WordReading (romaji)MeaningNotes
がっこうgakkouschoolContains small っ (doubled k) + long ou
おばあさんobaasangrandmotherLong aa vowel — count 5 beats
ちょっとchottoa little / just a momentちょ = combination; small っ before と
でんしゃdenshatrainん takes one beat; しゃ = combination
ありがとうarigatouthank youLong ou at end — 5 beats total

How to review your mistakes

After taking any quiz — this one, a flashcard app, or a random kana test — review your mistakes immediately. For each mistake: (1) find the character in the chart above, (2) read the row it belongs to aloud three times, (3) write the character 5 times while saying the sound, (4) go back to the quiz and answer correctly once more before moving on. This active error correction loop is far more effective than simply reviewing the correct answer passively.

💬 Want to practice reading hiragana with a real Japanese tutor? Get $10 in italki credits and book your first lesson today.

Recommended Next Articles

Now that you have a solid foundation in hiragana, here are the natural next steps:

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How to Learn Katakana: Fast Strategy + Complete Character Guide PointDetailsWhat is katakana?46-character phonetic syllabary; angular shapes; same sounds as hiraganaWhen it is usedForeign loanwords, foreign names, emphasi...
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What Should You Learn First in Japanese? Hiragana, Grammar, Vocabulary, or Kanji? Not sure what to study first in Japanese? This guide gives you the recommended order — hiragana first, then phrases, grammar, and vocabulary — plus goal-based variations for JLPT, travel, and more.
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Japanese Pronunciation Basics: Long Vowels, っ, and ん Explained Master three critical Japanese pronunciation features: long vowels (おばさん vs おばあさん), the double consonant っ (sokuon), and the syllabic nasal ん.
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What Should You Learn First in Japanese? Hiragana, Grammar, Vocabulary, or Kanji? Not sure what to study first in Japanese? This guide gives you the recommended order — hiragana first, then phrases, grammar, and vocabulary — plus goal-based variations for JLPT, travel, and more.
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