忠孝両不全
(chuu kou ryou fu zen)
It means (I'm) unable to be faithful and dutiful (to my parents).
The Japanese have a special keyboard with Kangi characters.
Look up on google the HIRAGANA symbols for: -I -Ku and -To
There are three writing systems in Japanese: kanji (characters borrowed from Chinese), hiragana, and katakana. There are over 2,000 commonly used kanji characters, along with 46 characters in both hiragana and katakana.
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.
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.
All of the Japanese kanji characters are pictorial and carry meaning, and are far too numerous to list.
The two symbols painted on either side of his face reflect the duality of Mutoh's character. On the right side of his face are the Japanese characters for 'patience'. The characters on the left side of his face read 'flame'.
There is no such thing as a Japanese Alphabet. Japanese uses 2 syllabaries (symbols that represent whole syllables) and about 2000 Chinese characters.
The Japanese symbols for haiku can be written in hiragana or katakana characters as 俳句. These characters represent the traditional Japanese form of poetry that consists of 17 syllables in a 5-7-5 pattern.
The generic name for all symbols in Japanese is "Kana."There are three sets of kana all used together, and each set has a generic name:Hiragana (set of phonetic symbols for syllables, used mainly for Japanese grammar words)Katakana (set of phonetic symbols for syllables, used mainly for foreign words)Kanji (chinese characters)
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.
Japanese people typically use a combination of hiragana, katakana, and kanji characters when texting. They also use various emojis and kaomoji (emoticons using Japanese characters) to add emotion and tone to their messages. Additionally, some popular messaging apps in Japan offer specific features tailored to the Japanese language, such as predictive text and autocorrect for kanji characters.