A (kana)

in hiragana or in katakana (romanised a) is one of the Japanese kana that each represent one mora. あ is based on the sōsho style of kanji , and ア is from the radical of kanji . In the modern Japanese system of alphabetical order, it occupies the first position of the alphabet, before い. Additionally, it is the 36th letter in Iroha, after て, before さ. Its hiragana resembles the kana no combined with a cross. The Unicode for あ is U+3042, and the Unicode for ア is U+30A2.

a
transliterationa
hiragana origin
katakana origin
spelling kana朝日のア
(Asahi no "a")

The characters represent [a].

Form Rōmaji Hiragana Katakana
Normal a/i/u/e/o
(あ行 a-gyō)
a
aa, ah
ā
ああ, あぁ
あー
アア, アァ
アー

Derivation

The katakana ア derives, via man'yōgana, from the left element of kanji . The hiragana あ derives from cursive simplification of the kanji .

Variant forms

Scaled-down versions of the kana (ぁ, ァ) are used to express sounds foreign to the Japanese language, such as ファ (fa). In some Okinawan writing systems, a small ぁ is also combined with the kana く (ku) and ふ (fu or hu) to form the digraphs くぁ kwa and ふぁ hwa, although others use a small ゎ instead. In hentaigana, a variant of あ is appeared with a stroke written exactly as wakanmuri.

Stroke order

Stroke order in writing あ
Stroke order in writing ア
Stroke order in writing あ

The Hiragana あ is made with three strokes:[1]

  1. At the top, a horizontal stroke from left to right.
  2. A downward vertical stroke starting above and in the center of the last stroke.
  3. At the bottom, a loop like the Hiragana .
Stroke order in writing ア

The Katakana ア is made with two strokes:[2]

  1. At the top, a stroke consisting of a horizontal line and a short horizontal line proceeding downward and to the left.
  2. Starting at the end of the last stroke, a curved line proceeding downward and to the left.

Other communicative representations

  • Full Braille representation
あ / ア in Japanese Braille
あ / ア
a
ああ / アー
ā
+あ / +ー
chōon*

* When lengthening "-a" syllables in Japanese braille, a chōon is always used, as in standard katakana usage instead of adding an あ / ア.

Character information
Preview
Unicode nameHIRAGANA LETTER AKATAKANA LETTER AHALFWIDTH KATAKANA LETTER ACIRCLED KATAKANA A
Encodingsdecimalhexdecimalhexdecimalhexdecimalhex
Unicode12354U+304212450U+30A265393U+FF7113008U+32D0
UTF-8227 129 130E3 81 82227 130 162E3 82 A2239 189 177EF BD B1227 139 144E3 8B 90
Numeric character referenceああアアアア㋐㋐
Shift JIS[3]130 16082 A0131 6583 41177B1
EUC-JP[4]164 162A4 A2165 162A5 A2142 1778E B1
GB 18030[5]164 162A4 A2165 162A5 A2132 49 151 5184 31 97 33129 57 209 5481 39 D1 36
EUC-KR[6] / UHC[7]170 162AA A2171 162AB A2
Big5 (non-ETEN kana)[8]198 166C6 A6198 249C6 F9
Big5 (ETEN / HKSCS)[9]198 232C6 E8199 124C7 7C
Character information
Preview
Unicode nameHIRAGANA LETTER SMALL AKATAKANA LETTER SMALL AHALFWIDTH KATAKANA LETTER SMALL A
Encodingsdecimalhexdecimalhexdecimalhex
Unicode12353U+304112449U+30A165383U+FF67
UTF-8227 129 129E3 81 81227 130 161E3 82 A1239 189 167EF BD A7
Numeric character referenceぁぁァァァァ
Shift JIS[3]130 15982 9F131 6483 40167A7
EUC-JP[4]164 161A4 A1165 161A5 A1142 1678E A7
GB 18030[5]164 161A4 A1165 161A5 A1132 49 150 5184 31 96 33
EUC-KR[6] / UHC[7]170 161AA A1171 161AB A1
Big5 (non-ETEN kana)[8]198 165C6 A5198 248C6 F8
Big5 (ETEN / HKSCS)[9]198 231C6 E7199 123C7 7B

Footnotes

gollark: Here is the problem, you see.
gollark: ++help
gollark: ++search ALGOL
gollark: ++search this is kind of broken
gollark: Or if the containment unit is the MacGuffin and not a singularity in it.

References

  • Gilhooly, Helen (2003) [1999]. Beginner's Japanese Script. Teach Yourself. London: Hodder Headline. ISBN 0-340-86024-3. OCLC 56469680.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.