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Nihongo Lesson #1

Welcome to your Japanese lesson! Japanese is a rewarding language! While the writing system looks complex, the basic sentence structure and pronunciation are remarkably consistent.

1. The Three Writing Systems

Japanese uses three scripts, often all in the same sentence:

  • Hiragana (ひらがな): 46 phonetic characters used for native words and grammar. Start here.
  • Katakana (カタカナ): 46 phonetic characters used for foreign loanwords (e.g., kōhī for coffee).
  • Kanji (漢字): Over 2,000 logographic characters from China representing concepts or words.

2. Pronunciation Basics

Japanese is “mora-timed,” meaning every syllable gets the same amount of time.

  • Vowels: There are only five, and they never change:
    • A as in “father”
    • I as in “machine”
    • U as in “flute”
    • E as in “bed”
    • O as in “more”

3. Basic Sentence Structure: SOV

English uses Subject-Verb-Object (“I eat an apple”). Japanese uses Subject-Object-Verb (“I apple eat”).

Key Sentence Pattern: A wa B desu (A is B)

  • Watashi wa Anna desu. (I am Anna.)
  • wa (は): A “particle” marking the topic (“As for me…”).
  • desu (です): The polite form of “to be”.

4. Essential Phrases & Greetings

EnglishJapanese (Romaji)Hiragana/Kanji
Hello / Good AfternoonKonnichiwaこんにちは
Thank you (Polite)Arigatō gozaimasuありがとうございます
Excuse me / SorrySumimasenすみません
Nice to meet youHajimemashiteはじめまして
Yes / NoHai / Iieはい / いいえ
What is this?Kore wa nan desu ka?これはなんですか?

5. Numbers (1–10)

  1. Ichi (いち)
  2. Ni (に)
  3. San (さん)
  4. Yon/Shi (よん/し)
  5. Go (ご)
  6. Roku (ろく)
  7. Nana/Shichi (なな/しち)
  8. Hachi (はち)
  9. Kyū (きゅう)
  10.  (じゅう)

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