Struggling to make sense of kanji, hiragana, and katakana? Learn how these three scripts evolved to work together and how to start reading them today.

The mix of scripts provides visual clarity: you can look at a sentence and instantly pick out the 'meat'—the kanji—and the 'connectors'—the hiragana. Kanji act like the structural beams of the sentence, and the hiragana is like the mortar holding them together.
Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco

Eli: You know, Miles, I was looking at a Japanese sentence earlier and it felt like I was staring at a puzzle where the pieces came from three different boxes. You’ve got these elegant curves, then sharp geometric lines, and then these incredibly dense, complex characters all sitting side-by-side. It’s a bit wild, right?
Miles: It really is! It’s like the language is wearing three different outfits at once. But what’s fascinating is that it wasn't always this way. Back in the 5th century, Japan didn't actually have a writing system of its own. They started by adopting kanji from China and Korea, but they used them in this really clever, almost rebellious way called Manyōgana—where they just borrowed the sounds of the characters and ignored the meanings entirely.
Eli: So they were basically using complex symbols as a phonetic alphabet? That sounds like a lot of extra work!
Miles: Exactly, and that struggle for efficiency is actually what gave birth to the hiragana and katakana we see today. It’s a story of monks, noblewomen, and a quest for a unique cultural identity. So, let’s dive into how these three systems actually work together to make sense of the world.