Kana | |
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Script type | |
Time period | c. 800 CE to the present |
Direction | Vertical right-to-left, left-to-right |
Region | Japan |
Languages | Japanese, Ryukyuan languages, Hachijō, Ainu, Palauan[1] |
Related scripts | |
Parent systems | |
ISO 15924 | |
ISO 15924 | Hrkt (412), Japanese syllabaries (alias for Hiragana + Katakana) |
Unicode | |
Unicode alias | Katakana or Hiragana |
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Japanese writing |
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Components |
Uses |
Transliteration |
Kana (仮名, Japanese pronunciation: [kana]) are syllabaries used to write Japanese phonological units, morae. In current usage, kana most commonly refers to hiragana[2] and katakana. It can also refer to their ancestor magana (真仮名, lit. 'true kana'),[3] which were Chinese characters used phonetically to transcribe Japanese (e.g. man'yōgana); and hentaigana, which are historical variants of the now-standard hiragana.
Katakana, with a few additions, are also used to write Ainu. A number of systems exist to write the Ryūkyūan languages, in particular Okinawan, in hiragana. Taiwanese kana were used in Taiwanese Hokkien as ruby text for Chinese characters in Taiwan when it was under Japanese rule.
Each kana character corresponds to one sound or whole syllable in the Japanese language, unlike kanji regular script, which corresponds to a meaning. Apart from the five vowels, it is always CV (consonant onset with vowel nucleus), such as ka, ki, sa, shi, etc., with the sole exception of the C grapheme for nasal codas usually romanised as n. The structure has led some scholars to label the system moraic, instead of syllabic, because it requires the combination of two syllabograms to represent a CVC syllable with coda (e.g. CVn, CVm, CVng), a CVV syllable with complex nucleus (i.e. multiple or expressively long vowels), or a CCV syllable with complex onset (i.e. including a glide, CyV, CwV).
The limited number of phonemes in Japanese, as well as the relatively rigid syllable structure, makes the kana system a very accurate representation of spoken Japanese.