Hiragana – alphabet Hiragana Charts: Stroke Order, Practice, Mnemonics

Greetings, today I am going to give away a hiragana chart with stroke order and other useful information. Let’s choose one that you like and practice it for a while.

There is no doubt that this is a very suitable one for beginners. There will be only uppercase letters in the letter. As part of this comparison, we will also ask: Are we and the original cut the same in terms of quality? Let’s start over with a pencil and see what we can come up with. You may want to take a look at these links for more information.

Hiragana chart with stroke order

JLPT TUTOR Hiragana chart

Standard Hiragana chart

Hiragana chart with stroke order

organized chart of all Hiragana letters with stroke order.

Easy Japanese” are available for downloading free of charge. The entire textbook, or individual lessons, can be downloaded in PDF format.

Standard Hiragana chart

organized chart of all Hiragana letters by Annamária Kiss.

Hiragana Chart + Free Download + Printable PDF with 3 different colors ひらがな表

Learning Hiragana can be daunting for Japanese students at the beginning. 

There are 46 letters you need to know in Hiragana. 

They are easier than you think

Hiragana Charts download .The Hiragana Chart .pdf can be found be found here and it contains some FREE Hiragana Mnemonics!

Hiragana chart will help you learn Japanese pronunciation properly, read Japanese

beginners’ textbooks and write sentences in Japanese. Japanese will become a lot easier to study after having learned Hiragana.

Practice the Japanese hiragana syllabary (syllabic alphabet) with this cheat sheet. This hiragana chart includes pronunciation in IPA and Hepburn romanization (which is also how you can type the characters on a computer).

Recommended for: Very beginning Japanese students who are starting with hiragana and would like to revise or use this as a cheat sheet.

organized chart of all Hiragana letters by Textfugu.

4 Free Printable Hiragana Chart PDF with Aesthetic Japanese Four Seasons Design!

All the files are made in PDF format and printable in A4 size. Check the designs and download your favorite season!

This site offers educational teaching materials for young children, such as a large hiragana trace print, a hiragana practice print for each Japanese syllabary, and a large trace brush print for children who are practicing letters for the first time. It can be downloaded.

Children will be able to practice writing hiragana little by little with a fun color print that incorporates illustrations and mazes.

Purin and Tsuzuku national language prints offer free hiragana practice prints with cute illustrations.

One-letter hiragana practice prints include a gauge illustration that parents can use to praise their children. If you have been practicing one or two letters intensively, you can easily progress to yoon, hiragana, and writing similar letters like “ki-sa” and “nu-me”.

From Hiragana, you can download free Hiragana practice prints that use two types of typefaces.

The print that allows you to trace large letters and words one by one, the print that allows you to trace the Japanese syllabary together, and the trace print of the Japanese syllabary with illustrations for each word are thick and weak fonts “UD. You can select the font from “Digital textbook” and “HG textbook”, which is a font that has the strength of tome, splash, and harassment, which is also used in textbooks.

Free hiragana practice print with coloring is available from Kids Step Hiragana Practice Print.

The illustrations are all painted! From the large hiragana practice prints to the small hiragana, the hiragana words, the dakuten, the hiragana puzzles, and the fill-in-the-blank prints! Combining study with play, it’s a fun print.

Hiragana Renshucho offers free color prints with cute illustrations for kids at Nifty’s Benkyo.

Trace first the large letters printed lightly, then the slightly smaller letters, and then the small step print that writes the letters in the blank space without squares, as well as the checkbox for parents. You can motivate your child by drawing small illustrations and sticking stamps and stickers on them.

In the hiragana practice section, you can download free hiragana and brush stroke practice prints.

A good way to practice hiragana is to trace and fill in the blanks for each character. With illustrations for all the words, you can practice without feeling weak even if you don’t know all the characters. There is also a brush stroke practice print that allows children to gradually move from straight lines to zigzags.

Lee’s Kyozaikan / Japanese practice prints also contain Hiragana practice prints and online 

“Lee’s Kyozaikan” Hiragana practice print records the names of many things around us

You can download free pictures and letters, hiragana practice prints with similar shapes such as “a” and “o”, and dictation practice prints of things’ names from Lee’s Kyozaikan / Japanese language.

To improve your vocabulary, if you’re able to read hiragana, move on to the line knot print, and if you’re able to write hiragana, move on to the dictation print.

It is possible to make dictation prints online using Kakikata Print Maker.

As part of the original print edit screen, you can also set the paper size, orientation, direction, and size of the characters, as well as whether a start arrow indicates the writing order and stroke direction.

A variety of templates are available, including “Basic” where characters are arranged vertically and horizontally, “Picture diary” where you can draw pictures, “With a model” where you can write while looking at a model, “One character at a time” where you can practice carefully, and “Fill-in problem” where furigana is also allowed. 

you can download a character-by-character hiragana practice print for free. It is a simple layout print with 20 practice cells per character (40 practice sessions including tracing) on one print, so it is recommended when you want to concentrate on practicing only the characters you are not good at. After selecting the characters you want to practice, you can print by simply clicking the print image.

Tofugu uses it on their “Learn Hiragana” page (you should check it out if you’re learning hiragana and don’t have a method, or if you’re just curious). There are only the main kana, as well as the dakuten/combo hiragana, and it’s very basic, printable (in black and white).

Dr. Moku uses mnemonics to teach hiragana. Those who do not relate to Tofugu’s hiragana mnemonics should try it.

There are no mnemonics here since this is a basic hiragana chart. Even so, it’s a very simple and useful one for Japanese students.

Timothy Stouth and Alexis Cowan have come up with some great hiragana mnemonics. I hadn’t seen many of these mnemonics before.

For Japanese students, learning Hiragana can be challenging at first.  In Hiragana, you need to know 46 letters.  You’ll be surprised at how easy they are

Here is a chart showing the 46 basic hiragana characters along with their romaji. Vowels are represented by the first five letters. A combination of the vowels and the rest of the rows formed the remainder of the hiragana. 

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