AP Japanese Language and Culture

Advanced Placement Japanese Language and Culture building Japanese language proficiency.

Basic Concepts

Japanese Writing Systems

Understanding Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji

Japanese is written using a combination of three scripts: Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji. Each script has its own purpose and is essential for reading and writing fluently.

  • Hiragana is the basic phonetic script and is used for native Japanese words, grammatical particles, and verb endings.
  • Katakana is used for foreign words, loanwords, onomatopoeia, and emphasis.
  • Kanji are characters borrowed from Chinese and represent whole words or ideas. They can have multiple readings.

How They Work Together

A typical Japanese sentence will use all three scripts. Mastery of these is the foundation for progressing to higher levels of Japanese.

Tips for Learning

  • Practice writing each character repeatedly.
  • Read simple texts to see how scripts are used in context.
  • Use flashcards for Kanji memorization.

Real-World Use

Reading menus, street signs, and manga all require knowledge of the scripts.

Examples

  • カタカナ (katakana) is used for the word 'コンピューター' (computer).

  • The sentence 今日はいい天気です uses all three scripts.

In a Nutshell

The building blocks of Japanese literacy are three scripts: Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji.

Key Terms

Hiragana
A Japanese syllabary used for native words and grammar.
Katakana
A Japanese syllabary used for foreign words and emphasis.
Kanji
Chinese characters used in Japanese to represent words or ideas.