learn how to write katakana in minutes lesson 2

Learn How to Write Katakana in Minutes – L002

Welcome to the second lesson in my Learn Japanese series. In this section, let’s learn how to recognize and write Katakana with the correct stroke order. If you haven’t learned about Hiragana yet, go back one lesson.

Download the free katakana worksheet PDFs below and let’s get started.

What is Katakana?

Katakana is the second syllabary used in Japanese. Buddhist monks originated it as a shorthand for kanji, aka Chinese characters. They wanted a quicker way to write the complex characters, and so katakana was developed.

Now, Katakana is used to express foreign loanwords in Japanese, to emphasize specific words and onomatopoeia, and even as flair on advertisements and packaging. Katakana uses sharper, more concise strokes, but some characters look the same as their hiragana counterparts.

Katakana also expresses the exact same sounds (phonemes) as hiragana. So あ sounds the same as ア.

Pronunciation Note:

(International Phonetic Alphabet “IPA” symbol is included for clarity)

Because katakana is used to write foreign loanwords, it often utilizes “small letters” (拗音 Yōon) to help guide pronunciation.

For example, パーテー (party) uses a small ‘イ,’ so it sounds more like the English “party”. You’ll learn more about using small characters and digraphs (two-character sounds) in the next lesson.

Learn the stroke order for katakana by following along with the video below.

Learn to Recognize and Write Katakana

katakana chart

This chart covers all 46 basic katakana characters. Similar to how the English alphabet has its own order (a, b, c, d, etc.), the katakana syllabary is ordered “a, ka, sa, ta, na, ha, ma, ya, ra, wa, n”.

We’ll talk about combining characters in depth in the next lesson.

Get the Free How to Write Katakana Practice Worksheets

Download the PDFs HereThese download as a .zip file, so unzip the file to access the PDFs.

If that doesn’t work, try downloading it from my Ko-Fi page. Consider supporting me if you enjoy these lessons:

Follow Along to the Katakana Stroke Order Video

More Practice

Here are some katakana words you can practice writing after you finish practicing each individual character. As a fun bonus, try writing your name in katakana, too!

As you write, notice how the sounds in Japanese correlate to the English loanword. Sometimes they aren’t intuitive, but just keep practicing, and you’ll get them in no time.

アップル apple

インク ink
イタリアン italian

ウール wool
ウード wood
ウオーター water

エレファント elephant

オレンジ orange

カード card

キウイ kiwi
キロ kilo

クレジット credit

ケルビン (degrees) kelvin

コーヒー coffee

サラダ salad
サービス service (free)

シーウィード seaweed
シークワサー shikuwasa (citrus depressa)

スルー through
スモール small

セロリ celery

ソフトボール softball

タッチ touch

チュロス churros
チームメイト teammate(s)

ツーブロック two block (hairstyle)

テンプル temple

トータル total
トラブル trouble

ナビ navigation

ニュース news

ヌードル noodle(s)

ネクタイ necktie

ノーベル Nobel

ハウス house 
ハッピー happy

ヒーロー hero

フレッシュ fresh

ヘルプ help

ホリディ holiday

マザー mother

ミートソース meat sauce

ムード mood

メディウム medium

モデル model

ヤード yard

ユニーク unique

ヨーロパ europe
ヨグルト yogurt

ライト light ラーメン ramen

リラックス relax

ルール rule

レール rail 
レジュメ resume 
レポート report

ローン loan 
ロード road

ワンタイムパスワード one time password

ヲチ watch

Share to Social Media