Na (kana)
な, in hiragana, or ナ in katakana, is one of the Japanese kana, which each represent one mora. The hiragana な is made in four strokes, the katakana ナ two. Both represent [na]. な and ナ originate from the man'yōgana 奈. な is used as part of the okurigana for the plain negative forms of Japanese verbs, and several negative forms of adjectives.
Form | Rōmaji | Hiragana | Katakana |
---|---|---|---|
Normal n- (な行 na-gyō) |
Na | な | ナ |
Naa Nā |
なあ なー |
ナア ナー |
na | ||||
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| ||||
transliteration | na | |||
hiragana origin | 奈 | |||
katakana origin | 奈 | |||
spelling kana | 名古屋のナ (Nagoya no na) | |||
unicode | U+306A, U+30CA | |||
braille |
kana gojūon | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Stroke order
Other communicative representations
Japanese radiotelephony alphabet | Wabun code |
名古屋のナ Nagoya no "Na" |
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Japanese Navy Signal Flag | Japanese semaphore | Japanese manual syllabary (fingerspelling) | Braille dots-13 Japanese Braille |
- Full Braille representation
な / ナ in Japanese Braille | |||
---|---|---|---|
な / ナ na | なあ / ナー nā | Other kana based on Braille な | |
にゃ / ニャ nya | にゃあ / ニャー nyā | ||
Preview | な | ナ | ナ | ㋤ | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unicode name | HIRAGANA LETTER NA | KATAKANA LETTER NA | HALFWIDTH KATAKANA LETTER NA | CIRCLED KATAKANA NA | ||||
Encodings | decimal | hex | decimal | hex | decimal | hex | decimal | hex |
Unicode | 12394 | U+306A | 12490 | U+30CA | 65413 | U+FF85 | 13028 | U+32E4 |
UTF-8 | 227 129 170 | E3 81 AA | 227 131 138 | E3 83 8A | 239 190 133 | EF BE 85 | 227 139 164 | E3 8B A4 |
Numeric character reference | な | な | ナ | ナ | ナ | ナ | ㋤ | ㋤ |
Shift JIS[1] | 130 200 | 82 C8 | 131 105 | 83 69 | 197 | C5 | ||
EUC-JP[2] | 164 202 | A4 CA | 165 202 | A5 CA | 142 197 | 8E C5 | ||
GB 18030[3] | 164 202 | A4 CA | 165 202 | A5 CA | 132 49 153 51 | 84 31 99 33 | ||
EUC-KR[4] / UHC[5] | 170 202 | AA CA | 171 202 | AB CA | ||||
Big5 (non-ETEN kana)[6] | 198 206 | C6 CE | 199 98 | C7 62 | ||||
Big5 (ETEN / HKSCS)[7] | 199 81 | C7 51 | 199 198 | C7 C6 |
gollark: This is neat, I was "optimizing" the size of my hello world program by just cutting off the bit at the end which seemed to be mostly zeros and thus worthless (this bit was half the total size) and now it runs fine but objdump refuses to operate on it.
gollark: NAP is literally the perfect language in every way, and you can't improve it, so any other language you make is a mere imperfect copy of it.
gollark: 300KB stylesheets, however, are bloat.
gollark: It's not. If you use it *sensibly* it is quite good.
gollark: OH POTATOSTHIS WEBSITE HAS A 300KB CSS STYLESHEET
References
- Unicode Consortium (2015-12-02) [1994-03-08]. "Shift-JIS to Unicode".
- Unicode Consortium; IBM. "EUC-JP-2007". International Components for Unicode.
- Standardization Administration of China (SAC) (2005-11-18). GB 18030-2005: Information Technology—Chinese coded character set.
- Unicode Consortium; IBM. "IBM-970". International Components for Unicode.
- Steele, Shawn (2000). "cp949 to Unicode table". Microsoft / Unicode Consortium.
- Unicode Consortium (2015-12-02) [1994-02-11]. "BIG5 to Unicode table (complete)".
- van Kesteren, Anne. "big5". Encoding Standard. WHATWG.
Look up な or ナ in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
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