• @[email protected]
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    610 months ago

    In many other languages homophones are often spelled differently. Hiragana and katakana phonetic alphabets so homophones all have the same spelling.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      German “umfahren” has entered the chat. Just with different stress it can either mean drive around someone/something or drive someone/something over.

    • The Stoned Hacker
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      310 months ago

      They also denote etymology differently. I learned (3 years of high school japanese, got to like a 1st graders level if that but i did learn a lot) that hiragana is used for words that were originally Japanese, while katakana is used for words adopted from other languages. That’s why you see English translated into katakana, not hiragana. Iirc, kanji might’ve also come before wither hiragana or katakana, and unlike Chinese there is a way to understand kanji based off of its original components (there’s a name for them I can’t remember)

      • Veloxization
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        510 months ago

        You’re correct! Katakana is indeed used to write loan words. There are of course other use cases like names of animal species (e.g. you can write 狐 or キツネ for fox, and 兎 or ウサギ for rabbit) but generally that’s where you see them.

        And yes, kanji was used prior to kana and the earlier versions of kana looked a lot more like kanji, but just got simplified as time went on.

        Oh, and the word you were looking for is “radicals” for the components. c:

        • The Stoned Hacker
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          310 months ago

          Thanks, all of that was stuff I had learned years ago and forgot. Thanks for helping jog my memory!