ChatterBank2 mins ago
Japanese Writing
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I was called "Kawaii" the other day, meaning "cute". In (I think it's called) Hirigana, it's spelled "かわいい". However my phone likes to change it to "可愛い", which when I looked it up means the same thing. Ao I done a little look into the language but it's a pickle to get my my head around without looking properly, could soneone explain how: a) two dofferent spellings mean the same and are said the same, and b) how "かわいい" changes to "可愛い" :)
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;-)
In our own language system, letters have no individual meaning. It's only when they're put together to form words that they take on meaning. Hirigana is (very roughly) similar in that each of the characters represents a spoken syllable and it's only when those syllables are put together that word are formed. There's also an additional set of characters (again representing syllables, rather than words), forming katakana, which is used for foreign and scientific terms. The two together form 'kana'.
However Japanese has also absorbed Chinese symbols into the language, where each symbol represents a different word (or a number of different words, with the appropriate one being determined by the context). That system is 'kanji'.
Written Japanese mixes both systems.
Kawaii is usually written in hirigana but technology may substitute the kanji version.
;-)
In our own language system, letters have no individual meaning. It's only when they're put together to form words that they take on meaning. Hirigana is (very roughly) similar in that each of the characters represents a spoken syllable and it's only when those syllables are put together that word are formed. There's also an additional set of characters (again representing syllables, rather than words), forming katakana, which is used for foreign and scientific terms. The two together form 'kana'.
However Japanese has also absorbed Chinese symbols into the language, where each symbol represents a different word (or a number of different words, with the appropriate one being determined by the context). That system is 'kanji'.
Written Japanese mixes both systems.
Kawaii is usually written in hirigana but technology may substitute the kanji version.
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