No (kana)
Character of the Japanese writing system / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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の, in hiragana, and ノ, in katakana, are Japanese kana, both representing one mora. In the gojūon system of ordering of Japanese syllables, it occupies the 25th position, between ね (ne) and は (ha). It occupies the 26th position in the iroha ordering. Both represent the sound [no]. The katakana form is written similar to the Kangxi radical 丿, radical 4.
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Quick Facts transliteration, hiragana origin ...
no | |||
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transliteration | no | ||
hiragana origin | 乃 | ||
katakana origin | 乃 | ||
Man'yōgana | 努 怒 野 乃 能 笑 荷 | ||
spelling kana | 野原のノ (Nohara no no) | ||
unicode | U+306E, U+30CE | ||
braille | |||
Note: These Man'yōgana originally represented syllables with one of two different vowel sounds, which merged in later pronunciation |
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