Korean scribes
China
The Japanese writing system, known as kanji, is based on Chinese characters. Kanji are adopted characters from Chinese writing, with each character representing a word or concept. In addition to kanji, the Japanese writing system also includes hiragana and katakana, which are syllabic scripts.
The early Japanese writing system was heavily influenced by Chinese characters, known as kanji. Over time, the Japanese developed two phonetic scripts, hiragana and katakana, to supplement kanji. This combination of characters allowed for more flexible and expressive writing.
China and Korea influenced Japan by religion (Buddhism) which was introduced through Chinese law, based on Indian beliefs. China's written language, using pictographs, is the basis for the Japanese writing system (Kanji).
There are many things that Japan took from China. three of them are silk, tea, n noodles! <<<<NOT CORRECT. The japanese "borrowed" Buddhism, the chinese writing system, and a centralized imperial state. Hope this helps :D
Chinese writing symbols are known as hanzi or Chinese characters. Each character typically represents a word or a morpheme, and they are used in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and other East Asian languages. There are thousands of characters in the Chinese writing system.
The current Japanese writing systems of kana and kanji is largely influenced by Chinese characters. The kana themselves are derived from certain key Chinese characters, while kanji (literally means "Chinese/Han characters") are partially unmodified from Chinese characters (but that may change in a matter of time).
yes it is different. the Japanese number system is the Chinese number system but the Japanese changed it to make it unique.
Zero. Japanese is not related to any other language. There is a common misconception that Japanese is related to Chinese, but this is untrue. Japanese has borrowed many words and some of the writing system from Chinese, but the two language families are completely unrelated.
No, the Japanese language did not develop directly from Chinese. Japanese has its own unique origins and linguistic roots, though it has borrowed some vocabulary and writing characters from Chinese due to historical influences and interactions between the two cultures.
It depends on the individual. Japanese has a simpler writing system but more complex grammar, while Chinese has a more challenging writing system but simpler grammar. Both languages require a significant time commitment to master.
Japanese can be written both vertically (縦書き, tategaki) and horizontally (横書き, yokogaki), formal Japanese writing is usually written vertically with lines moving from right to left. The Japanese writing system takes its roots from the Chinese writing system, and as such was initially oriented vertically. 横書き was introduced later with the introduction of western language dictionaries, the reason being because having both vertical and horizontal text in one book was rather impractical and made it more difficult to use.
You might be referring to 草書 /sou sho/ which is cursive/simplified way of writing Chinese characters (Kanji) used by Japanese women in the past, from which Hiragana is believed to have gained its place in Japanese writing system.