あ
In the Japanese script, the syllabic (or, more properly, moraic) characters あ (hiragana) and ア (katakana) come first in the system. modern alphabetical gojūon (五十音), before い; and the 36th in the iroha poem, between て and さ. In the table to the right, which follows the gojūon order (by columns, and from right to left), あ is found in the first column (which it gives its name to: あ行, "column A"). and the first row (to which it gives its name: あ段, "row A").
The character あ comes from the kanji 安, while ア comes from 阿.マー&
A smaller character is used, ぁ, ァ; for the formation of new sounds that do not exist in traditional Japanese, such as ふぁ (fa) and ヴァ (va).
Romanization
According to the Hepburn, Kunrei-shiki, and Nihon-shiki romanization systems, あ, ア are romanized as "a".
Writing
- The character ・ is written with three strokes:
- Horizontal stroke at the top, from left to right.
- Vertical stroke, from top to bottom, that cuts the first
- Curved stroke that begins in the central part of the character, descends and ends up drawing a wide circular arch. This stroke resembles the character itself.
- The δ character is written with two strokes:
- I bring that at first it goes from left to right, but at the end it goes down to the left.
- I'm slightly curved.
Other representations
- Braille System:
●- -- -- |
- Japanese phonetic alphabet: ▪ a of Asahi"where Asahi can be translated as "birth sun")
- Morse Code: --・--
Contenido relacionado
Bora–Witoto languages
Annex:Languages by number of native speakers
The MA