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Japanese forms of writing

xylude

後輩
20 Feb 2010
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I recently started learning the kanji and in my pursuits of this have come across some other different forms of writing. I knew about hiragana and katakana, but today have come across 'kun-yomi' and 'on-yomi'. Are these just other words for hiragana and katakana? Also, are there any free places for me to read up on which forms of writing are used for what situations?
 
I am not the best to comment, but the kun-yomi and on-yomi are different ways the kanji can be pronouced. The On-yomi is based the original chinese reading and the kun-yomi on the japanese reading. I'm sure someone better qualified can better inform you.
 
kun-yomi and on-yomi are the two types of Kanji readings. Each Kanji character has kun-yomi readings or on-yomi readings or both.

The kun-yomi (訓読み) is the original Japanese reading, while on-yomi (音読み) is the Chinese reading, which was adapted to Japanese since the introduction of Chinese characters (Kanji) in Japan in the 4th century.

For example: the Kanji character 水 (water) has two readings: mizu (みず) and sui (スイ).

みず is a Japanese reading (kun-yomi), whereas スイ is the on-yomi (from the Chinese "shui").

(In dictionaries, when transcribed in kana, the kun-yomi is usually written in hiragana, and the on-yomi in katakana)

A Kanji character may have several kun-yomi, and several on-yomi, like 日 (day, sun).

There are also (fortunately rare) cases when the pronunciation of a word has nothing to do with the readings of its Kanji components. Examples: 今日 (きょう today), 相撲 (すもう sumo).

I don't think there's an absolute rule for the use of readings. Though I think that, most of the time, when a Kanji is used alone it's read in kun-yomi.
Other than that, you just need to learn vocabulary and associate the reading to the spelling, while also learning each Kanji with its readings.
 
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