The Rest of Hiragana

 We have to learn to write the rest of the hiragana rows by ourselves as homework. Here is a chart with the stroke order for the remaining ones!


It is important to know that letters may look different digitally and handwritten. This has to do with fonts. Sometimes, the 3rd line in き (ki) for example, is connected to the curve on the bottom. However, our books show a version where the curve and slanted line are disconnected. Know that both are correct. It's a matter of preference, but Takeyama-sensei writes letters like this disconnected, so lets stick to that!


Extra... for anyone interested:

Exercises related to learning to write hiragana provide MANY new words for us to learn. However, without any sort of context, determining their definition proves to be tricky.. Therefore, I decided to only list the new words with meanings that seemed more likely to be given to us as beginners, which are also more commonly used in everyday life. That I felt sure about, at least. Words with just one commonly used meaning (seemingly) will be marked with '*' :)





It is difficult to determine a word's meaning without context since many kanji have more than one reading, and the way to know what they mean is usually through understanding the situation it is said in, or through the sentence it is in, itself.

For example: え (e) can mean 絵 (e) (picture/painting), as well as 柄 (e) (grip). - 2 very different words.

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