I have a question about も's stroke order. I have seen many books and images where the first stroke is said to be the same as in the し form and many others where the first and second stroke are said to be the horizontal ones. Can you tell me why there is such a difference?
The way it's shown in this video is the "right" way, with the vertical line first. You probably know that in Japanese writing you usually write horizontal lines first, but sometimes (like with も), you don't. Apparently this is a common mistake (and it was probably just a mistake in the books you mentioned). I looked on Google and couldn't find an authoritative explanation for why it's like this - I guess no one actually knows? But people seem to think it's either a quirk because of the way the character was developed from the original kanji or to make it faster to write.
Yours videos are very helpful for self study people like my self.Thank you. Please may be katakana writing video next time? And also is it "hu" or "fu" or somewhere between them?I saw "hu" but my textbook said "fu"?
What I wanted to know is how or where do you start write your own alphabet? From left to right or from right to left or from up to the button of paper? Thank you and hopefully you can help for its part of my research.
they write it up to down starting from the right and moving to the left. first the vowels, in order a i u e o, and then repeating this pattern for every consonant k s t n h m y r w and then finally singular n
"fu" is how it's normally written with Roman letters, but it's actually "hu". If you put your lips in the position to say "ooh" and then try to say the English word "who", you'll notice the "h" automatically comes out sounding more like "f" (actually, it's not "f", it's really the sound you make when you blow out a candle). The different sound is just a natural thing that happens. Btw, that's the same reason "ti" and "tu" are usually romanized as "chi" and "tsu".
As a 16year old Indian with bad English i started learning Japanese by myself and it helped me so much
I recently started learning Hiragana to begin my trek into Japanese. This helps. You have inspired me to practice Japanese calligraphy.
How is it going ?you learned ?
u learning?
休みなしに綺麗な文字を書き続けられるの本当に凄いですよね〜
Привет, а это правда что в японском языке некоторые иероглифы означают слоги, а другие слова например "земля".
Или буквы
I thought of reading it but there is KANJI😮
こういう丁寧を見ると、心が浄化されます。ろ、を3に近い我が字、改めます。
I spent like a week redoing these writing orders to memorize this omg im so done with this alphabet
Thank you for teaching this lesson.
I am Arab and I started learning Japanese This language is very beautiful and I am trying to learn hiragana and katakana ❤❤
Your channel is a treasure to us. 😃
His pencil stroke is sharpen than my future
😂
ありがと😊
I like さ(sa) and き(ki), they look like a smiling man with a hat facing sideways.
お手本より綺麗なのすごい
매일 5글자씩 공부! Thanks! 보기만 해도 힐링되요 😄😄
Thank you so much.
Just need that book
Apart from your excellent explanation and the beautiful calligraphy, I wanted to know how long is this square in which you write?
ありがとう!
すごいなぁ…ほとんどはみ出てないし、
お手本のグレーの部分をほとんど残してない…。
i can weite multiple kanji but i always struggle writing あ
Thank you I enjoy your tutorial.
Isso é muito bom estou começando a aprender hiragana isso vai me ajudar a escrever melhor 😅
Nuce From Bangladesh ❤
where can i buy this kind of note book?
Where can i buy the book
我が子と、職場のブラジル人保育園の5歳児に、平仮名をどう学習体験させてあげるか研究中です。
美しい平仮名のお手本✍️🗣ありがとうございます😊
私は「を」の発音をwoと発音してましたがOの発音が一般的だと
最近知りました。
愛媛県の人はwoと発音する人が多いです。
interesting
❤❤
Isso é tão satisfatório
I have a question about も's stroke order. I have seen many books and images where the first stroke is said to be the same as in the し form and many others where the first and second stroke are said to be the horizontal ones. Can you tell me why there is such a difference?
The way it's shown in this video is the "right" way, with the vertical line first. You probably know that in Japanese writing you usually write horizontal lines first, but sometimes (like with も), you don't. Apparently this is a common mistake (and it was probably just a mistake in the books you mentioned). I looked on Google and couldn't find an authoritative explanation for why it's like this - I guess no one actually knows? But people seem to think it's either a quirk because of the way the character was developed from the original kanji or to make it faster to write.
ありがと
ありがとう*
Yours videos are very helpful for self study people like my self.Thank you.
Please may be katakana writing video next time?
And also is it "hu" or "fu" or somewhere between them?I saw "hu" but my textbook said "fu"?
Both. And if you want to do fa, fi, fe, fo it's ふぁ, ふぃ, ふぇ, ふぉ.
@@moltzer Thanks
👍👍👍
Do you have the soft copy of the one you we're writing i want to print that
yea i’ve been looking for that too
Arigato gozaimasu😊
good
க ~ お this word same ❤
What I wanted to know is how or where do you start write your own alphabet? From left to right or from right to left or from up to the button of paper? Thank you and hopefully you can help for its part of my research.
From observation, it's typically up, down, left, right, although it really depends especialy when you reach kanji
they write it up to down starting from the right and moving to the left. first the vowels, in order a i u e o, and then repeating this pattern for every consonant k s t n h m y r w and then finally singular n
Both informative and ASMR
🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸
அஇஉஎஒ.க கி கு கே
Perfect match 👍
Quá tuyệt vời
Time Stamp? Diacritical Marks? Contracted Sounds?
Pls can I know the book name , I want like that too
ARIGATOUUU!!❤🎉
Man, eu tô sofrendo pra escrever そ😅
Cho mình hỏi chỗ mua quyển vở tập viết này ở đâu ạ
everything was so smooth until I see the hiragana of "hu"
Arigatou
hello, do you have a printout of this? I'm struggling to write it myself
I need this too
@@AlyssonBonnie check out tofugu (: they have a buncha sheets
1回目視聴!(たぶん)
For Hu, in my Japanese textbook it’s written as Fu, can it be pronounced as both or is my text book just wrong?
They aren't able to pronounce HU, it's always FU
the sound for it is a mix between hu and fu, sort of like a puff of breath, if you know how to pronounce it, it doesnt matter if its spelled hu or fu
"fu" is how it's normally written with Roman letters, but it's actually "hu". If you put your lips in the position to say "ooh" and then try to say the English word "who", you'll notice the "h" automatically comes out sounding more like "f" (actually, it's not "f", it's really the sound you make when you blow out a candle). The different sound is just a natural thing that happens. Btw, that's the same reason "ti" and "tu" are usually romanized as "chi" and "tsu".
Он так вкусно пишет
Me trying to write them 😅fast😭
こんにちは
I just want of god in the completion
why さ letter has a gap in the middle ?
Theres two ways to write it. Most natives write it with the gap but its perfectly fine to write it without the gap, as everyone will understand you.
May i know the pencil that you're using?
八幡に油谷棚荒間は浅輪は魔羅真幡木で、またメールすることになった‼️
مرحبا 🇴🇲😎
🇩🇿🇩🇿
-įmanoma Japoniškai rašyti greičiau nei Lotyniškoms raidėmis?
shouldn’t be ‘ki’ written like ‘き’ this? 2:26
its still the same i think because there are many cursive style we can use
if only japanese adapted the English alphabet. it could be a lot more easier. 😔
こくしぼう
The Japanese a, i,
Se ve tan fácil y es untanto complicada la a😊
temple
Arigatou Godaimasu!!! Subarashi!!!
Congrats to everyone who is early And who found this comment 👏 ❤
yet another unoriginal comment
Koks velnias išrado japonų raides?
The only thing I know in Japanese is this: あ (a)
Bro literally messed up 😂😂😂😂😂😂and
Aiue
いちさ
Mandarin lebih susah
Your worng broo not hu only Fu
its actually ふ
doesnt matter if we call it hu or fu, its just to show english speakers how it sounds
Not you telling a Japanese person how to pronounce his own words
I like to learn Japanese in basically
Could you help me to learn in Japan?