Fairly easily. There's about 50 kana for each type, and they represent the same types of syllables.
hiragana katakana and kanji and furigana which is a mix of hiragana and katakana
I like Hiragana better!
It takesAT LEAST 4-5 years to learn fluent, including kanji , katakana and hiragana
It depends on your primary language or preference. Hiragana, just like Katakana, has a simple structure or basic. Though it is both easy to learn together rather than separate. Hiragana is the simplified way of writing native nihongo(japanese). Katakana is used for words that have no real translation in nihongo(foreign language).
Of course it is! Hiragana is essential to the Japanese language, and katakana is necessary for writing foreign words.
Both. They're not different systems of languages, just different ways that things are written. It's better to learn Hiragana first, but Katakana is essential for reading foreign words written in Japanese.
Charlee in hiragana is ちゃーりー, but most names are written in katakana. Charlee is katakana is チャーリー.
"A" in hiragana is "あ" in katakana it is "ア"
katakana,hiragana and kenji
In katakana, "na" is ナ and in hiragana "na" is な.
The three Japanese alphabets are Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji. Hiragana is used for native Japanese words and grammatical particles, Katakana is used for borrowed words and onomatopoeia, and Kanji consists of Chinese characters used for nouns, verbs, and adjectives in the Japanese language.
Most often katakana