Which alphabet? There is hiragana (used in daily writing) and katakana (kind of your ALL CAPS words use in advertising or to write loan words---words originally from other languages). Both can be found by doing a Google images search for hiragana or katakana. There are dozens of them floating around the web just waiting to be found. <3
There is only one English alphabet, and it cannot be translated into the Japanese alphabet because there is no such thing as a Japanese alphabet. Japanese uses syllabaries and picture-symbols in its writing.
There is no such thing as a Japanese Alphabet. Japanese uses 2 syllabaries (symbols that represent whole syllables) and about 2000 Chinese characters.
Japanese
13
Asahi
One could find a download of the Japanese alphabet through apps for an iPod or iPhone. There are also many photos in google images including the full Japanese alphabet, and through language companies such as Rosetta Stone.
In Japanese, when the word no is said, it can be said as ___, ______, or ________. The Japanese language does not use the same alphabet as the English language.
"A" in hiragana is "あ" in katakana it is "ア"
'Romanji' is an incorrect transliteration of 'romaji.' It is the writing of Japanese in the Latin alphabet.
There is no such thing as a Chinese or Japanese alphabet. Japanese uses 2 syllabaries (symbols that represent whole syllables) and about 2000 Chinese characters. Chinese uses tens of thousands of characters.
Japanese has no alphabet. It uses two syllabaries (Katakana, Hiragana), and about 2000 Chinese characters (Kanji).
刀 Katana