は ハ ha.
The Japanese "alphabet" is actually the commonly known "fifty syllable chart" table.
The Japanese letters are called kana, and each kana represents a syllable. There are two ways of writing kana, namely hiragana and katakana. Hiragana is used for general writing, while katakana is used to express foreign words and special vocabulary.
Japanese kana is divided into four types: unvoiced, voiced, semi-voiced, and dialed. The alphabet formed by arranging the unvoiced sounds according to the pronunciation rules and adding the dial sound "ん" is called the "fifty syllable map".
The first threshold for learning Japanese is the syllabary.
In the fifty-syllable diagram, the horizontal arrangement is called "line" and the vertical arrangement is called "section". For example, "あいうえお" is called "あ行", "かきくけこ" is called "か行", and the vertical ones are called "あdan", "いdan", etc.
The Japanese syllabary chart, also known as the syllabary, is a chart that arranges Japanese kana (hiragana, katakana) based on vowels and consonants.
Each kana in Japanese represents a syllable (except oblique sounds), so it belongs to the syllabic alphabet.
There are seventy-one Japanese kana, including voiceless, voiced, semi-voiced and dialed sounds. There are 5 basic vowels, 41 consonants, and 4 cannot be spelled.
The kana representing forty-five voiceless syllables can be arranged into a table according to the pronunciation rules. This kana table is called the fifty syllables (ごじゅうおんず).
The vertical lines (vertical rows) of the table are called "sections". Each section has ten kana, and there are five sections in total. The horizontal direction is called "line", each line has five kana, and there are ten lines in total.