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Christine Perry www.facebook.com/muffinmash

Reading and Writing

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Page 1: Reading and Writing

Christine Perry

www.facebook.com/muffinmash

Page 2: Reading and Writing

Hiragana: Phonetic alphabet, each letter corresponds to a sound,

used for particles, verb endings, phonetic spellings

Katakana: Phonetic alphabet, each letter corresponds to same

sounds as in hiragana but used for foreign loanwords

Kanji: Chinese characters used for nouns, verb stems, names,

places. Each kanji may have multiple meanings/pronunciations which depend on usage.

Page 3: Reading and Writing

Today we are learning…

Commonly used kanji such as numbers, yen symbol, characters used to denote time

Hiragana and how it links to kanji pronunciation

Katakana and how it can be transliterated into English words

Page 4: Reading and Writing

Kanji often have both, so they can be used in many different words as components (on) or stand alone as words (kun).

On’yomi Chinese pronunciations of kanji that are mostly used

when strings of multiple kanji are needed to make a word. Mostly, these are short sounds.

Kun’yomi Japanese adaptation of kanji that attaches whole words

to a single kanji (or whole verb stems). Hiragana may be appended, such as in verbs, to complete the word.

Page 5: Reading and Writing

ku/u ku/rau ta/beru ha/mu

Jisho.org

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taberu

Jisho.org

Page 7: Reading and Writing

Maikeru.cc

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きや

きゃ

しよ

しょ

りゆ

りゅ

しっぱい

けってい

Kiya

Kya

Shiyo

Sho

Riyu

Ryu

Shippai

Kettei

Yomuze.com

Page 10: Reading and Writing

しゅう

きゅう

ちょう

しょう

こおり

かっこいい

へいせい

れんあい

Shuu

Kyuu

Chou

Shou

Koori

Kakkoii

Heisei

Renai

Page 11: Reading and Writing

Used for writing foreign loanwords, such as English words commonly used in everyday language

Also may be seen to phonetically represent Japanese words as a sort of stylized script when the writer wants to differentiate it from surrounding words or highlight it somehow (such as the way Jisho.org writes on’yomispellings in kanji lookups).

Page 12: Reading and Writing

Maikeru.cc

Page 13: Reading and Writing

キヤ

キャ

シヨ

ショ

リユ

リュ

シッパイ

ケッテイ

ジャージー

Kiya

Kya

Shiyo

Sho

Riyu

Ryu

Shippai

Kettei

Jaajii (jersey)

Yomuze.com

Page 14: Reading and Writing

William

(wiriamu)

Christine

(kurisutiin)

Fight

(faito)

Venus

(viinasu)

Lady

(redii)

ウィリアム

クリスティーン

ファイト

ヴィーナス

レディー

Yomuze.com

Page 15: Reading and Writing

First, learn the stroke order for each character and practice writing them with the proper strokes many times. (Graph paper with large squares) This is the way you will learn and practice all characters,

including all kanji, so get used to it…

Read a lot. Textbooks have readings geared toward your skill level, but to practice hiragana, katakana, and basic kanji recognition without one, I recommend manga geared towards children.

Page 16: Reading and Writing

Now, we will look at the most basic of kanji: numbers

一 いち (ichi) 1

二 に (ni) 2

三 さん (san) 3

四 よん (yon) 4

五 ご (go) 5

六 ろく(roku) 6

七 なな (nana) 7

八 はち (hachi) 8

九 きゅう (kyuu) 9

十 じゅう (juu) 10

Page 17: Reading and Writing

You know 1-10, so you can use those to make any number up to 99.

Structure is: tens place-ten-ones place

20= 二十 (nijuu)

36= 三十六 (sanjuuroku)

88= 八十八 (hachijuuhachi)

92= 九十二 (kyuujuuni)

There are a few cases where the sound becomes different to make the flow better, but since we’re just going to look at the kanji today, I won’t go into it.

Page 18: Reading and Writing

五時

一時四十分

Page 19: Reading and Writing

一日六月二千十五年

560円

Page 20: Reading and Writing

月曜日 火曜日 水曜日げつようび かようび すいようびGetsuyoubi Kayoubi Suiyoubi

木曜日 金曜日 土曜日もくようび きんようび どようびMokuyoubi Kinyoubi Doyoubi

日曜日にちようびNichiyoubi

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http://www.textfugu.com/resources/hiragana-chart/

http://www.tofugu.com/2010/03/23/the-types-of-kanji-in-japanese-onyomi-vs-kunyomi/

http://www.yomuze.com/kana/youon.php

http://jisho.org/

http://www.maikeru.cc/allthingsjapan_language_hiraganaandkatakanacharts.htm

Page 37: Reading and Writing

Genki I, Genki II, Genki Intermediate

http://jisho.org/ (beta version has write-in kanji look up tool)

Rikaikun/rikaichan browser extension

Erin, Japan Foundation videos

https://www.erin.ne.jp/en/

Page 38: Reading and Writing

To download this presentation, as well as my other presentations from this weekend and more resources,

visit my Facebook:

www.facebook.com/muffinmash