Japanese uses three writing systems simultaneously — and yes, all three appear in the same sentence. It sounds overwhelming, but each system has a clear purpose, and understanding why they exist makes learning them much less intimidating.
This guide explains what each writing system does, how they work together, and the most practical learning order for beginners.
Why Three Writing Systems?
A single Japanese sentence might look like this:
私はコーヒーを飲みます。 (I drink coffee.)
- 私 (watashi) = Kanji — "I/me"
- は (wa) = Hiragana — topic particle
- コーヒー (kōhī) = Katakana — "coffee" (borrowed from English)
- を (wo) = Hiragana — object particle
- 飲みます (nomimasu) = Kanji + Hiragana — "drink" (kanji stem + hiragana ending)
Three systems, one sentence, completely natural for a Japanese reader. Each system carries different types of information, making text more readable — not less.
Hiragana (ひらがな) — The Foundation
What It Is
Hiragana is a phonetic alphabet of 46 basic characters. Each character represents one sound (a syllable). It's the first writing system every Japanese child — and every learner — studies.
What It's Used For
- Native Japanese words that aren't written in kanji
- Grammar elements: particles (は, が, を, に), verb endings, adjective endings
- Furigana: tiny hiragana above kanji to show pronunciation
- Children's books and beginner texts (written entirely in hiragana)
The 46 Basic Hiragana
The characters are organized in a grid based on consonant + vowel combinations:
| a | i | u | e | o | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| — | あ | い | う | え | お |
| k | か | き | く | け | こ |
| s | さ | し | す | せ | そ |
| t | た | ち | つ | て | と |
| n | な | に | ぬ | ね | の |
| h | は | ひ | ふ | へ | ほ |
| m | ま | み | む | め | も |
| y | や | — | ゆ | — | よ |
| r | ら | り | る | れ | ろ |
| w | わ | — | — | — | を |
| n | ん |
Plus dakuten (゛) and handakuten (゜) marks that modify sounds:
- か (ka) → が (ga)
- さ (sa) → ざ (za)
- た (ta) → だ (da)
- は (ha) → ば (ba) → ぱ (pa)
How Long to Learn Hiragana
Most learners can recognize all 46 hiragana in 1-2 weeks with daily practice. Writing them from memory takes a bit longer, but reading ability comes quickly.
Learning tips:
- Use mnemonics: あ (a) looks like an acrobat, き (ki) looks like a key
- Practice by reading Japanese menus, signs, and simple texts
- Write each character 10 times while saying the sound aloud
- Use spaced repetition apps (Anki, etc.) for efficient memorization
Katakana (カタカナ) — The Foreign Word System
What It Is
Katakana is another phonetic alphabet with the same 46 sounds as hiragana — just written with different characters. Same sounds, different visual style.

What It's Used For
- Foreign loanwords: コーヒー (coffee), パソコン (personal computer), レストラン (restaurant)
- Foreign names: マイケル (Michael), ロンドン (London)
- Emphasis (like italics in English)
- Scientific terms and technical vocabulary
- Onomatopoeia: ドキドキ (heart pounding), ワクワク (excited)
The 46 Basic Katakana
| a | i | u | e | o | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| — | ア | イ | ウ | エ | オ |
| k | カ | キ | ク | ケ | コ |
| s | サ | シ | ス | セ | ソ |
| t | タ | チ | ツ | テ | ト |
| n | ナ | ニ | ヌ | ネ | ノ |
| h | ハ | ヒ | フ | ヘ | ホ |
| m | マ | ミ | ム | メ | モ |
| y | ヤ | — | ユ | — | ヨ |
| r | ラ | リ | ル | レ | ロ |
| w | ワ | — | — | — | ヲ |
| n | ン |
Why Katakana Can Be Tricky
Katakana gets less practice than hiragana because loanwords appear less frequently than native vocabulary in beginner materials. But in modern Japan, katakana is everywhere — menus, product labels, advertisements, technology terms.
Common katakana words you'll see constantly:
- アメリカ (America), イギリス (England), インド (India)
- テレビ (television), スマホ (smartphone), インターネット (internet)
- ビール (beer), ケーキ (cake), サラダ (salad)
Kanji (漢字) — The Meaning Carriers
What It Is
Kanji are Chinese characters adopted into Japanese. Each kanji represents a meaning (and sometimes multiple meanings and pronunciations). There are thousands of kanji, but you don't need all of them.
How Many Kanji Do You Need?
- Basic literacy: ~300 kanji (enough to read simple texts, signs, menus)
- Newspaper level: ~2,136 kanji (the official "jōyō kanji" list taught in Japanese schools)
- JLPT N5 (beginner exam): ~80 kanji
- JLPT N1 (advanced exam): ~2,000+ kanji
How Kanji Readings Work
This is the part that confuses beginners: most kanji have two or more pronunciations.
- On'yomi (音読み) — the Chinese-derived reading, used in compound words
- Kun'yomi (訓読み) — the native Japanese reading, used when the kanji stands alone
Example with 食 (eat/food):
- On'yomi: ショク (shoku) — used in 食事 (shokuji = meal), 食品 (shokuhin = food product)
- Kun'yomi: た(べる) (taberu) — used in 食べる (taberu = to eat)
Don't panic about readings. You'll learn them naturally as you learn vocabulary. Don't try to memorize all readings of a kanji in isolation — learn them through words.
Essential Beginner Kanji (First 20)
Start with the most useful everyday kanji:
| Kanji | Meaning | Example Word |
|---|---|---|
| 日 | day, sun | 日本 (nihon = Japan) |
| 月 | month, moon | 月曜日 (getsuyōbi = Monday) |
| 水 | water | 水 (mizu = water) |
| 火 | fire | 火曜日 (kayōbi = Tuesday) |
| 木 | tree, wood | 木曜日 (mokuyōbi = Thursday) |
| 金 | gold, money | お金 (okane = money) |
| 土 | earth, soil | 土曜日 (doyōbi = Saturday) |
| 人 | person | 日本人 (nihonjin = Japanese person) |
| 大 | big | 大きい (ōkii = big) |
| 小 | small | 小さい (chiisai = small) |
| 山 | mountain | 富士山 (fujisan = Mt. Fuji) |
| 川 | river | 川 (kawa = river) |
| 食 | eat, food | 食べる (taberu = to eat) |
| 飲 | drink | 飲む (nomu = to drink) |
| 見 | see, look | 見る (miru = to see) |
| 行 | go | 行く (iku = to go) |
| 来 | come | 来る (kuru = to come) |
| 学 | study, learn | 学生 (gakusei = student) |
| 生 | life, birth | 先生 (sensei = teacher) |
| 語 | language | 日本語 (nihongo = Japanese language) |
The Right Learning Order
Week 1-2: Learn all hiragana. This is non-negotiable — everything in Japanese starts here.
Week 3-4: Learn katakana. Practice by reading loanwords on Japanese products and menus.
Month 2+: Start kanji gradually, 3-5 new kanji per week, always learning them as part of vocabulary words rather than in isolation.
Ongoing: All three systems reinforce each other. As your vocabulary grows, kanji recognition becomes natural.
How Immersive Learning Helps
Writing systems are best learned through context and exposure, not isolated drills. When you hear a word spoken and see it written, your brain creates stronger connections than flashcard memorization alone.
Langmitra's Japanese for English Speakers course teaches writing systems alongside real conversation through AI-powered podcast lessons. You learn to recognize hiragana and katakana in context — menu items, greetings, everyday phrases — while building listening comprehension simultaneously. It's the natural way Japanese children learn, adapted for adult English speakers.
For the full Japanese learning path, see our Japanese proficiency roadmap and our JLPT levels guide from N5 to N1.
