Dakuten゛ and Handakuten ゜ can be added to the basic Hiragana set to change the pronunciation and extend the alphabet used to create native Japanese words. ha, hi, hu, he, ho; ka, ki, ku, ke, ko; ma, mi, mu, me, mo; Previous Lesson; All Lessons; Next Lesson Lesson7 Hiragana (ha - hi - fu - he - ho) The 5th set of Hiragana is the Monographs ( gojūon) combinations with h. Each vowel (a - i - e- o - u) gets paired with the consonant to form a new syllable. The only exception in this set is that the sound 'hu' does not feature and is relpaced with 'fu' (The pronounication lies somewhere between hu and OnlineJapanese Lessons (without ads!)http://Courses.LearnJapanese123.com how to write Japanese H HiraganaLessons - Stroke Guide to は、ひ、ふ、へ、ほ (Ha, Hi, Fu, He, Ho) Hiragana is a part of the Japanese writing system. It is syllabary, which is a set of written characters that represent syllables. Thus, hiragana is a basic phonetic script in Japanese. WritingHiragana From ha to ho. Following the instructions on each stroke below, write hiragana characters. Then, choose the correct sounds that the hiragana characters you have written represent. * [s] how to start the stroke.; [e] how to end the stroke. 1. ha. hi. Vay Tiền Nhanh Chỉ Cần Cmnd Nợ Xấu. は This character looks like a capital “H” with a small “a” at the bottom right. It’s spelled “ha”. ひ Imagine that this character is a big smile from someone laughing “hehe”. It’s spelled “hi”, but sounds like the “he” in “hehe”. ふ This character resembles the shape of Mt. Fuji. It’s spelled “hu” and makes up the first character in “Fuji”. へ This character looks like an arrow pointing up toward heaven. It sounds like the “he” in “heaven. ほ This character looks pretty similar to ha, but imagine that this one is a capital “H” with a small “o” at the bottom right. It’s spelled “ho”.

hiragana ha hi hu he ho