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Cardinal Numbers : English - Japanese Hiragana Translation Game
(Keisū : Eigo - Nihongo Hiragana Hon'yaku Gēmu)

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Try the Quiz : CARDINAL NUMBERS (KEISŪ)

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Usage of Japanese Scripts
  • There are 3 Japanese scripts : Hiragana, Katakana & Kanji. Mostof the Japanese sentences are written in Hiragana, Katakana & Kanji, all three.
  • Hiragana is used for the endings of verbs and for grammatical particles.
  • Katakanais used for transcription of words borrowed from foreign languages(except Chinese), like country names, personal names, etc.
  • Both Hiragana and Katakana letters are a phonetic representation of sound, representing exactly the same set of sounds.
  • Kanji, which is a set of Chinese characters called sinograms, is used for the nouns and the radicals of verbs.
  • The Hiragana script has a Kanji equivalent (excepts the endings of verbs and the particles).
  • The Katakana script does not have a Kanji equivalent.
  • Whereas Hiragana and Katakana are phonetic representations of sound, Kanji conveys sounds as well as meanings.
  • A sentence in Japanese can be written in Hiragana and Katakana only (without Kanji).
  • Romaji (Roman letters) is simply the transliteration of  Japanese in the Latin script. It is sometimes used for the convenience of foreigners, mostly on sign-boards and at stations.
  • The Romaji vowelsā, ī, ū, ē signify emphasis, and hence are also written asaa, ii, uu et ee. ex. īe = iie
  • The vowel ō becomes ou and not oo ex. gakkō = gakkou
  • In Katakana, the emphasis on the vowel signifies a long sound written as . ex. nōto (notebook), will be written in katakana as : ノ

Example. The sentence 'Little Theresa is six years old' is written in :

Japanese Romaji : Teresa chan wa roku sai desu ;

Japanese traditional (Hiragana, Katakana and Kanji) :  テレサちゃんです。; where
Kanji = (roku = six), (sai = years old) ; Katakana = テレサ(Teresa = Theresa) and the rest is Hiragana.

Japanese Hiragana and Katakana (without Kanji) : テレサちゃんろくさいです。
Note - The Kanjis in the sentence written in Japanese traditional, and are replaced by their hiragana equivalents ろく (roku) andさい(sai) respectively.

Exceptions :
'I am 20 years old' is said in Japanese as : Watashi wa hatachi desu. (not Watashi wa nijū sai desu) 

The pattern after 20 is : 21 = nijuuichi; 22 = nijuuni and so on. The same pattern follows upto hundred.
Hundred 100 = hyaku. 200 = ni hyaku. However there are 3 exceptions to this : 
300 = sanbyaku ; 600 = roppyaku and 800 = happyaku. The rest follow hyaku. Likewise thousand = sen. 2000 = ni sen, but 3000 = sanzen and 8000 = hassen

Note :
'Chan' is used as a suffix to a child's name and is the equivalent of Miss and Master. 

(ha) is read (wa) only when it is used as the particle attached to the noun or the subject of a sentence.
In other words, one writes not for the particle wa(wa) is always used after the subject.
In the example above, (wa) comes after the subject Teresa テレサ.

Romaji Vocabulary  Hiragana Vocabulary   Katakana Vocabulary  Kanji Vocabulary  

Hiragana Alphabets   Katakana Alphabets   Kanji Characters Tables




Keisū - Rei kara Jyūkyū ni (Numbers from Zero to Nineteen)

Numbers in English (Keisū Eigo de) : Numbers in Japanese Hiragana (Keisū Nihongo Hiragana de) : Romaji & Kanji Scripts
  • zero : れい 
    - Romaji : rei 
    Kanji :

  • one : いち
    - Romaji : ichi
    Kanji :

  • two :
    - Romaji : ni
    Kanji :

  • three : さん
    - Romaji : san
    Kanji :

  • four : し, よん
    - Romaji : shi, yon
    Kanji :

  • five :
    - Romaji : go
    Kanji :

  • six : ろく
    - Romaji : roku
    Kanji :

  • seven : しち, なな
    - Romaji : shichi, nana
    Kanji :

  • eight : はち
    - Romaji : hachi
    Kanji :

  • nine : く, きゅう
    - Romaji : ku, kyū
    Kanji :

  • ten : じゅう
    - Romaji : jū
    Kanji :

  • eleven : じゅういち
    - Romaji : jūichi
    Kanji : 十一

  • twelve : じゅうに
    - Romaji : jūni
    Kanji : 十二

  • thirteen : じゅうさん
    - Romaji : jūsan
    Kanji : 十三

  • fourteen : じゅうし, じゅうよん
    - Romaji : jūshi, jūyon
    Kanji : 十四

  • fifteen : じゅうご
    - Romaji : jūgo
    Kanji : 十五

  • sixteen : じゅうろく
    - Romaji : jūroku
    Kanji : 十六

  • seventeen : じゅうしち, じゅうなな
    - Romaji : jūshichi, jūnana
    Kanji : 十七

  • eighteen : じゅうはち
    - Romaji : jūhachi
    Kanji : 十八

  • nineteen : じゅうきゅう
    - Romaji : jūkyū
    Kanji : 十九


Sonota no Keisū (Miscellaneous Numbers)

Numbers in English (Keisū Eigo de) : Numbers in Japanese Hiragana (Keisū Nihongo Hiragana de) : Romaji & Kanji Scripts


  • twenty : にじゅう
    - Romaji : nijū
    Kanji : 二十

  • thirty : さんじゅう
    - Romaji : sanjū
    Kanji : 三十

  • forty : よんじゅう, しじゅう
    - よんじゅう
    しじゅう Romaji : yonjū, shijū
    Kanji : 四十


  • fifty : ごじゅう
    - Romaji : gojū
    Kanji : 五十

  • sixty : ろくじゅう
    - Romaji : rokujū
    Kanji : 六十

  • seventy : しちじゅう, ななじゅう
    - しちじゅう
    ななじゅう Romaji : shichijū, nanajū
    Kanji : 七十


  • eighty : はちじゅう
    - Romaji : hachijū
    Kanji : 八十

  • ninety : きゅうじゅう
    - Romaji : kyūjū
    Kanji : 九十

  • hundred : ひゃく
    - Romaji : hyaku
    Kanji :

  • thousand : せん
    - Romaji : sen
    Kanji :

  • million : ひゃくまん
    - Romaji : hyakuman
    Kanji : 百万



Try the Quiz : CARDINAL NUMBERS (KEISŪ)


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