HiraganaLessons - Stroke Guide to は、ひ、ふ、へ、ほ (Ha, Hi, Fu, He, Ho) Hiragana is a part of the Japanese writing system. It is syllabary, which is a set of written characters that represent syllables. Thus, hiragana is a basic phonetic script in Japanese.
ha ひ. hi. ふ. hu. へ. he. ほ. ho. In hiragana, extended vowels are held for two syllable-counts instead of one and are written by simply adding a hiragana vowel character. Long あ sound: ああ
HiraganaHU or FU. This is how to draw the character "HU" or "FU". It is composed of three strokes. The first stroke is a downward diagonal that turns back and into an "s" shape. The second stroke acs up. The third stroke follows the same arc back down. With two dots (called nigori) it becomes "BU". A circle (called maru) makes it "PU". Hirgana HE
Hereis the link to the Learn Kanji Website: of three modern Japanese writing systems, hiragana (ひらがな) will help you get start
Reading ha. Usage Examples: はた (hata) flag はな (hana) flower はし (hashi) chopstick はなします to speak. Stroke order: Printed form: ひ. Reading: hi. Usage Examples: ひ (hi) fire ひと (hito) person ひとつ (hitotu/hitotsu) one unit. Stroke order: Printed form: ふ. Reading: hu/fu. Usage Examples: ふえ (fue) flute
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は This character looks like a capital “H” with a small “a” at the bottom right. It’s spelled “ha”. ひ Imagine that this character is a big smile from someone laughing “hehe”. It’s spelled “hi”, but sounds like the “he” in “hehe”. ふ This character resembles the shape of Mt. Fuji. It’s spelled “hu” and makes up the first character in “Fuji”. へ This character looks like an arrow pointing up toward heaven. It sounds like the “he” in “heaven. ほ This character looks pretty similar to ha, but imagine that this one is a capital “H” with a small “o” at the bottom right. It’s spelled “ho”.
Stroke order MOV Printed form は Reading ha Usage Examples はた hata flag はな hana flower はし hashi chopstick はなします to speak Stroke order MOV Printed form ひ Reading hi Usage Examples ひ hi fire ひと hito person ひとつ hitotu/hitotsu one unit Stroke order MOV Printed form ふ Reading hu/fu Usage Examples ふえ fue flute ふたつ hutatu/futatsu two units ふね fune boat Stroke order MOV Printed form へ Reading he Usage Examples へた heta unskillful へそ heso belly button Stroke order MOV Printed form ほ Reading ho Usage Examples ほし hoshi star ほか hoka other ほね hone bone [“ma” - “yo”] [Home] [“na” - “no”] Course Info Instructors Departments Level Topics Learning Resource Types assignment Activity Assignments
ハ This looks like a stick that’s been broken in half. It’s spelled “ha” like the first two letters of “half”, and sounds like “hah”. ヒ Imagine a man sitting down. He has his arms stretched out in front of him. This character is spelled "hi", but sounds like "he". フ Imagine that this character is actually an owl’s beak saying “hoot hoot”. It’s spelled “hu” and sounds like the “hoo” in “hoot”. へ This character looks like an arrow pointing up toward heaven. It sounds like the “he” in “heaven. ホ This character resembles the Christian cross, which is a holy symbol. It sounds like “ho” in “holy”.
Este artigo foi útil? Considere fazer uma contribuição Dando prosseguimento ao estudo da escrita auxiliar hiragana, serão apresentadas nesta aula mais três séries, a saber1 ha, hi, hu, he, ho; ha às vezes, wa hi hu he ho O "ha", devido a um arcaísmo, também é muitas vezes lido como "wa", especialmente nos casos em que funciona como partícula ligada ao sujeito da ma, mi, mu, me, mo; ma mi mu me mo 3 ya, yu, yo; ya yu yo Nesta última série, não há símbolos correspondentes a "ye" ou "yi", fonemas que praticamente inexistem em por Emerson Santiago SilvaTexto originalmente publicado em artigo foi útil? Considere fazer uma contribuição
hiragana ha hi hu he ho