あJapanese Hiragana Mnemonics
Lock all 46 hiragana characters plus modifiers into memory using picture-based mnemonics, then write your first Japanese words and sentences by hand.
Phase 1Why Hiragana, Why Mnemonics
Understand what hiragana covers and why mnemonics beat flashcards
Hiragana is a grid, not a random alphabet
6 minHiragana is a grid, not a random alphabet
Your brain stores pictures, not squiggles
5 minYour brain stores pictures, not squiggles
Stroke order isn't pedantry — it's muscle memory
6 minStroke order isn't pedantry — it's muscle memory
Use the community's mnemonics, not your own
6 minUse the community's mnemonics, not your own
Phase 2Row-by-Row: Lock Every Kana
Lock each row with a vivid picture-mnemonic
A-I-U-E-O: the five shapes every other row reuses
7 minA-I-U-E-O: the five shapes every other row reuses
Ka-Ki-Ku-Ke-Ko and Sa-Shi-Su-Se-So
8 minKa-Ki-Ku-Ke-Ko and Sa-Shi-Su-Se-So
Ta-Chi-Tsu-Te-To and Na-Ni-Nu-Ne-No
8 minTa-Chi-Tsu-Te-To and Na-Ni-Nu-Ne-No
Ha-Hi-Fu-He-Ho and Ma-Mi-Mu-Me-Mo
8 minHa-Hi-Fu-He-Ho and Ma-Mi-Mu-Me-Mo
The last 11: Ya-Yu-Yo, Ra-Ri-Ru-Re-Ro, Wa-Wo, and ん
8 minThe last 11: Ya-Yu-Yo, Ra-Ri-Ru-Re-Ro, Wa-Wo, and ん
Phase 3Modifiers: Dakuten, Handakuten, Yōon
Layer dakuten, handakuten, and yōon onto known characters
Two little marks turn k into g, s into z
7 minTwo little marks turn k into g, s into z
The tiny circle that makes P
5 minThe tiny circle that makes P
Small や, ゆ, よ: the combo kana
7 minSmall や, ゆ, よ: the combo kana
Small っ and long vowels: the last two tricks
7 minSmall っ and long vowels: the last two tricks
Phase 4Handwrite Words and Sentences from Memory
Handwrite real Japanese words and sentences from memory
Handwrite your first full sentence from memory
20 minHandwrite your first full sentence from memory
Frequently asked questions
- How long does it really take to learn hiragana?
- This is covered in the “Japanese Hiragana Mnemonics” learning path. Start with daily 5-minute micro-lessons that build from fundamentals to hands-on application.
- Are mnemonics better than flashcards for hiragana?
- This is covered in the “Japanese Hiragana Mnemonics” learning path. Start with daily 5-minute micro-lessons that build from fundamentals to hands-on application.
- Do I need to learn stroke order for hiragana?
- This is covered in the “Japanese Hiragana Mnemonics” learning path. Start with daily 5-minute micro-lessons that build from fundamentals to hands-on application.
- What's the difference between hiragana, katakana, and kanji?
- This is covered in the “Japanese Hiragana Mnemonics” learning path. Start with daily 5-minute micro-lessons that build from fundamentals to hands-on application.
- Can I learn hiragana without learning to write it?
- This is covered in the “Japanese Hiragana Mnemonics” learning path. Start with daily 5-minute micro-lessons that build from fundamentals to hands-on application.
Related paths
🇧🇷Portuguese Ser vs Estar
Stop collapsing Portuguese into Spanish ser/estar and missing the third verb entirely. Build the three-way instinct — ser for identity, estar for current state, ficar for location, becoming, and staying — and prove it by describing yourself, your home, and your week using all three the way Brazilians actually do.
🇩🇪German Cases: Nominative, Accusative, Dative, Genitive
Stop drowning in German's 16-cell case chart. Learn one function per day — nominative, accusative, dative, genitive — until you can write short descriptions that force each case into use on purpose.
🇫🇷Master the French Subjunctive by Learning Its Triggers
Stop memorizing subjunctive endings in a vacuum and start recognizing the triggers that demand them. Build trigger-family intuition across doubt, necessity, emotion, and the concessive conjunctions — then prove it by writing an opinion paragraph using at least six distinct triggers.
カJapanese Katakana Mnemonics
Lock all 46 katakana characters plus modifiers using mnemonics that build on your hiragana knowledge, then decode real Japanese menus, signs, and brand names on sight.