Japanese Kanji Made Easy. Michael L. Kluemper

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Japanese Kanji Made Easy - Michael L. Kluemper

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looks like the string and tag for a NEW bottle of sake.

      NE

      ネ is like the head and antlers of a sacred deer, stretching his NEck.

      NO

      ノ is one stroke finished as another is about to be made for an ‘X’ to signify NO.

      HA

      ハ is the same as the kanji for 8, HAchi, and has the same pronunciation as its first syllable.

      HI

      ヒ is like a ladle of coffee (koHIin Japanese) just pulled from the HEAt.

      FU

      フ is like a scarF protecting you from sneezes like you find in hiragana ふ.

      HE

      ヘ, like the hiragana へ, is one HEck of a hill.

      HO

      ホ is the first sound in HOtto, the Japanese word for hot, and the way the Japanese like their tea.

      MA

      マ is like I am pointing my thumb to myself (MAi is the Japanese pronunciation of “my”).

      MI

      ミ is three things lined up which would be counted in Japanese as MIttsu (三つ).

      MU

      ム is a person pointing to himself as if using the French word to ask “MUa?”

      ME

      メ is the first sound of the word MExico and looks a bit like the letter X.

      MO

      モ is similar to hiragana も, but the notch line for one MO’ fish is a bit higher up the hook.

      YA

      ヤ is like a ball of YArn and two knitting needles.

      YU

      ユ sounds like the letter “U”, and looks like a “U” flipped over and lying on its side.

      YO

      ヨ is like a good comb to use on YOur hair.

      RA

      ラ is the RA in zebRA.

      RI

      リ is the same in katakana as in hiragana!

      RU

      ル is for a ROUte change that you might not see if you are driving too fast.

      RE

      レ is a REba– (the Japanese word for “lever”) on a wall, waiting to be pulled.

      RO

      ロ has a sound that is almost like the English “RO”, as in ROll.

      WA

      ワ looks like a windshield wiper (WAipa in Japanese).

      O

      ヲ is a rare character you might only see if you sail Over the sea in a boat.

      N

      ン is like the crisscross rope pattern of an ancient JomoN period pot.

      Kana Notes

      • The hiragana う and katakana ウ, when following kana that end in “o” or “u” sounds, serve to lengthen the preceding vowel. In katakana, the symbol ー is used to lengthen any vowel that precedes it.

      • A small っ (hiragana) or ッ (katakana) serves to double the consonant that follows.

      • The symbol" changes unvoiced sounds to voiced sounds: k becomes g; s becomes z; t becomes d; and h becomes b.

      • The symbol changes ha, hi, fu, he, and ho sounds to pa, pi, pu, pe, and po.

      A GUIDE TO THE ILLUSTRATIONS

      1. The kanji.

      2.

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