Mo is actually not written that way. Its the long stroke first, then the 2 horizontal strokes, I used to commit the same mistake until very recently that I noticed that its not like that
@@evaundele123 Sorry for the late reply. I used to do it like that and my Japanese teacher told me I was doing it wrong, then I researched a bit through Internet and noticed that the long stroke goes first even though in most characters the intersecting line goes last. What Nik said is GENERAL stroke order rule, and も (mo) is an exception to it. japanese.stackexchange.com/questions/4149/why-is-the-stroke-order-of-%E3%82%82-peculiar
@@TChLT Thank you for your reply! That's an interesting piece of information. With this explanation in mind it does seem logical that も is an exception.
I see "wa" written a lot with a line over it's right side. It's not two lines from dakuten, either. It's just one line. Can anybody explain that to me? I'm stumped.
are you sure it is not just people writing ka/かin a sloppy manner? that's at least what it looks like when i write sloppily.. xD i know it's a bit of a late reply, but just in case you hadn't gotten your answer yet i guess it's better late than never. ^^
There's actually a few more (ga...za...ba...pa...), but they add either 2 small strokes or a small circle (depending on which group) to the right corner of each corner of an existing group, for example the pa group is derived from the have group, with the addition of a small circle to the right upper corner. The ones in the video are all you need to learn the stroke order though.
Title in English, German description, Chinese music and Japanese visual.
I love it! 😂♥️🙌🏽👏🏽
Hahaha
Yin lol
Hotel Trivago
IKR
SO DO I
I am not a musicologist, but I think this music is Chinese, not Japanese...
I think so
Yes, I do the same
Lol true that first observation
That's the first thing I noticed when it loaded
So what
As Gretchen said, this is Chinese music...Stroke order is on point though.
quand le video est allemen pour le langue japonais et tu reponds a un commentaire anglais en francais... brdel
ejovo Et la musique est chinoise
James Charles hi sister
Im a dude but cool
Jumbled recollections of a gaijin you changed your name nuuuuuuu
I'm an Indian guy learning Japanese Hiragana strokes from a German guy with Chinese Background music.
and commenting in english..! hahah
There are two ways to writing そ
it says in the credits that the music is Chinese. Nice background music for learning hiragana.
Finally someone that knows how to write it correctly. Ive been through so many sloppy video
I'm learning some Japanese for fun, and this is really helpful. Thanks!
Me too 😌😌
another ditto
1:45 is ‘sa’
4:52 hello! how r u!
Awesome video! It's quick and shows everything twice!! perfect!
Beautiful! Thank you!
6:25 marking because I accidently snapped my wrist trying to write the the "nu" one
Good Video! I like how simple and clean you teach the stroke order. May I use this vizulisation for my own Video?
I'm learning Deutsch, and I happen to run into a german video about writing hiragana...
Thank you helped a lot ❤️❤️
I've been writing all these characters in wrong way so far
Nice music
thank you😘😘
Thank you!
I like how the description is in German lol. But anyway great video thanks a lot
So left to right has priority over top to bottom?
thank you so much from my friend yash
Thank you from Eshe
Can you make it so we can print these so we can practice with them
Nice vid
Nice
English title, German description, Chinese music and Japanese writing,
Mo is actually not written that way. Its the long stroke first, then the 2 horizontal strokes, I used to commit the same mistake until very recently that I noticed that its not like that
May I ask where you got that information from? I'm curious because it seems that there are different approaches.
Same, I've gotten mixed messages on this. Its frustrating.
@@evaundele123 Sorry for the late reply. I used to do it like that and my Japanese teacher told me I was doing it wrong, then I researched a bit through Internet and noticed that the long stroke goes first even though in most characters the intersecting line goes last. What Nik said is GENERAL stroke order rule, and も (mo) is an exception to it.
japanese.stackexchange.com/questions/4149/why-is-the-stroke-order-of-%E3%82%82-peculiar
@@TChLT Thank you for your reply! That's an interesting piece of information. With this explanation in mind it does seem logical that も is an exception.
Thankie!
Why is き sometimes shown with 3 strokes and other times 4? The computer font seem to be the 3 stroke order. Which one is the correct?
Both are correct
@@hided7831 ook!
You forgot to put what さ says its "Sa" btw (japanese friends help so much lol)
But why can't I download it? It's not available offline.
Why on table i found on wikipedia some characters are different? Are those differences acceptable?
yes, my mum that studied in japan writes 'a' differently, as long as it is similiar it's readable
00:00 00:11 00:19 00:31 00:39
Chinese Music for japanese teaching...lol
thanx bro... or thanx German guy lol
中國 音樂 很 好 聽! 謝謝!
是
no habla espanol
@@SuperCatfire No habló Español* 😂
There’s an unmarked character after ‘ko’, does anyone know what it is?
It's SA さ
Thank you! ✊🏻
Sa
I see "wa" written a lot with a line over it's right side. It's not two lines from dakuten, either. It's just one line. Can anybody explain that to me? I'm stumped.
are you sure it is not just people writing ka/かin a sloppy manner? that's at least what it looks like when i write sloppily.. xD i know it's a bit of a late reply, but just in case you hadn't gotten your answer yet i guess it's better late than never. ^^
This void is good for education
Hi
Hi
Yeah uhh theirs a app where u can do this
AARON!!!!!!
Thanks!
Isn't ri り?
hmm. is there a day to download this?
www.youtube-mp3.org/
Also, keep in mind that the stroke order for 'mo' is written wrong on this vid. First it's the big curly thing and then the 2 lines
🇧🇷👏👏👏😎
ハハ
What is @ 1:50
0:40
日本語が大好き
はい
私も!
Is this complete hiragana alphabet?
daksh khattri yes
There's actually a few more (ga...za...ba...pa...), but they add either 2 small strokes or a small circle (depending on which group) to the right corner of each corner of an existing group, for example the pa group is derived from the have group, with the addition of a small circle to the right upper corner.
The ones in the video are all you need to learn the stroke order though.
1:40
4:37
Haces vídeos
The stroke order for the hiragana mo is wrong, stroke 3 should be first, stroke 1 second and stroke 2 should be last.
music is kinda misleading though great video anyway
Lol Aaron
1:49 where is pernounce
2:21 -bookmark for me
It’s called a time stamp lmao
Chinese music? really?????
Lol
Traditional chinese and japanese music becomes boring after a while.