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Hiragana chart & reading guide

Everything you need to start reading hiragana — the full chart with romaji, the voiced and combination kana, and the handful of rules that trip up beginners.

What is hiragana?

Japanese is written with three scripts: hiragana, katakana, and kanji. Hiragana (ひらがな) is the rounded, flowing one, and it's almost always the first that learners pick up. Unlike the English alphabet, hiragana is a syllabary: each character stands for a whole sound — usually a consonant plus a vowel, like = "ka" — rather than a single letter.

There are 46 basic hiragana. Learn those, add a few simple modifications, and you can sound out any Japanese word phonetically. The good news: hiragana is remarkably regular. Once you know a character's sound, it reads the same way every single time — there are almost no exceptions.

Once hiragana clicks, the natural next step is the angular second syllabary — see the katakana chart & reading guide. Not sure how the two scripts differ? The hiragana vs katakana comparison lays them side by side.

The basic hiragana chart (gojūon)

The 46 base characters are traditionally laid out in a 5-vowel grid called the gojūon ("fifty sounds"). Read each row left to right; the vowel order is always a – i – u – e – o.

Base hiragana with romaji readings
aiueo
aiueo
kkakikukeko
ssashisuseso
ttachitsuteto
nnaninuneno
hhahifuheho
mmamimumemo
yyayuyo
rrarirurero
wwawo
nn

Watch the irregular readings. A few kana don't follow the tidy consonant+vowel pattern: is shi (not "si"), is chi, is tsu, is fu, and is a standalone n. In the typing game both spellings are usually accepted — you can type "shi" or "si" — but the readings above are the standard ones.

Voiced kana: dakuten and handakuten

Adding two small strokes (dakuten, ゛) or a small circle (handakuten, ゜) to the top-right of a kana changes its consonant sound. You don't learn new shapes — just the marks. They turn k→g, s→z, t→d, and h→b (dakuten) or h→p (handakuten).

Dakuten and handakuten hiragana
aiueo
ggagigugego
zzajizuzezo
ddajizudedo
bbabibubebo
ppapipupepo

and are pronounced the same as (ji) and (zu); they're rare and appear mostly in compound words.

Combination kana (yōon)

To write sounds like "kya" or "sho", a kana ending in i is followed by a small , , or . The two characters blend into one syllable. Note the small size — a full-size would be read separately.

Common combination kana
+ ya+ yu+ yo
きゃkyaきゅkyuきょkyo
しゃshaしゅshuしょsho
ちゃchaちゅchuちょcho
にゃnyaにゅnyuにょnyo
ひゃhyaひゅhyuひょhyo
りゃryaりゅryuりょryo
ぎゃgyaぎゅgyuぎょgyo
じゃjaじゅjuじょjo

Two rules about length

The small tsu (っ) — a doubled consonant

A small isn't pronounced on its own. It doubles the consonant that follows, marking a short pause. So is "kitte" (a stamp), not "kitsute". Think of the catch in the middle of "uh-oh".

Long vowels

A vowel held twice as long changes the word's meaning, so it's written out: (obasan, "aunt") versus (obāsan, "grandmother"). Long vowels are usually written by adding the matching vowel kana — and for the "o" sound, often with , as in (Tōkyō).

How to learn hiragana (a practical order)

  1. Learn in vowel rows, five at a time. Master あいうえお, then かきくけこ, and so on. Small batches stick better than trying to cram all 46 at once.
  2. Read aloud as you go. Tie each shape to its sound out loud — you're building a reflex, not memorising a picture.
  3. Drill with active recall. Seeing a chart isn't the same as recalling a kana under pressure. Test yourself: see the character, say or type the reading before checking.
  4. Space out your reviews. Revisit the ones you miss more often than the ones you know. A few minutes daily beats one long session a week.
  5. Then add dakuten and combos. Once the base 46 are solid, the voiced and combination kana take only a fraction of the time.

Practice the recall step here. The kana typing game shows you a character and asks you to type its romaji against the clock — exactly the active-recall drill above, turned into a combo chase. Its mastery tracker marks which kana you've nailed and which still need work, so weak characters come up more often.

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Common questions

How long does it take to learn hiragana?

Most people can read all 46 basic hiragana within one to two weeks of short daily sessions. The trick is active recall — seeing a character and saying its sound from memory — rather than just staring at a chart. A few focused minutes a day beats one long cram.

Should I learn hiragana or katakana first?

Hiragana first. It spells out native words and all of Japanese grammar, so you meet it constantly from day one. Katakana shares the same sounds and falls into place quickly once hiragana is solid — see hiragana vs katakana for how the two split the work.

How many hiragana characters are there?

There are 46 basic hiragana. Adding the voiced marks (dakuten and handakuten) and the small-y combinations pushes the readable total past 100, but every one is built from those original 46.

Is it OK to rely on romaji?

Only as a short-lived crutch. Romaji lets you start speaking sooner, but it slows real reading and hides sounds Japanese makes that English spelling does not. Switch to reading kana directly as soon as you can — the typing game is built to push you over that line.

What is the difference between hiragana and kanji?

Hiragana is phonetic — each character is a sound with no meaning of its own. Kanji are meaning characters borrowed from Chinese. Hiragana writes grammar, native words, and the readings of kanji, so it is the foundation you learn first.