There are exactly 46 katakana symbols and 46hiragana symbols, plus modifiers that expand those numbers to 71 symbols each.
There are officially 2,136 kanji characters, but most people know a few thousand more than that.
It is estimated that there are about 50,000 kanji in existence, but no one uses them all.
The Japanese writing system is based on three main scripts: Kanji (Chinese Characters), Hiragana (a set of symbols that make up different words), and Katakana (another set of symbols used for sounds and foreign borrowings). If you learn to reconize the symbols of Hiragana and Katakana you will be able to defrinciate between the Chinese and Japanese written language. You will only see Kanji in Chinese while Japanese is fused with their own symbols. A chart illustrating the Japanese 'kana' symbols can be found in the related link below.
In Japanese, the word for snake is "hebi" (蛇). Snakes are often seen as symbols of power, rebirth, and transformation in Japanese culture and mythology.
The Japanese symbol for "welcome" is "ようこそ" in Hiragana.
Some examples of written languages that use symbols include Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Egyptian hieroglyphics. These languages use characters or symbols to represent words or concepts.
Chinese symbols are called Hanzi or Chinese characters. Each character represents a unique concept or word, and they are used in writing Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and other languages.
since 1868
There are many things that are used as symbols in Japanese art. Cranes for example are used to symbolize beauty.
the Japanese symbols for protection is : 守り http://www.Japanese-symbols.org/Japanese-symbols-kanji/%E5%AE%88%E3%82%8A-protection
Hello in Japanese symbols.. = こんにちは (:
for what
Cupcake is written in Japanese as カップケーキ.
The Japanese have a special keyboard with Kangi characters.
That word does not exist in Japanese. In Japanese symbols, it would be written スペンサー
Because not everybody speaks English.There are many different languages. That's why. And not everyone has to use English. The Japanese symbols (kanji and kana) are believed to have been originally imported from old Chinese.
誰も信用できない are the Japanese symbols for "trust no one."
The Chinese symbols.
the Japanese symbols for together is 一緒 view this link for a big picture of it <a href="http://www.Japanese-symbols.org/Japanese-symbols-kanji/%E4%B8%80%E7%B7%92-together">http://www.Japanese-symbols.org/Japanese-symbols-kanji/%E4%B8%80%E7%B7%92-together</a> http://www.Japanese-symbols.org