In the Japanese writing system, are variant forms of hiragana.

Description

In contrast to modern Japanese, hiragana historically had several distinct forms representing a single sound. For example, while the hiragana reading "ha" has only one form in modern Japanese (は), until the Meiji era (1868–1912) it was written in various forms, including 18px|class=skin-invert-image, 18px|class=skin-invert-image, and 18px|class=skin-invert-image. The shift to using only one character for each sound occurred as part of the 1900 script reform, which also included other changes to the written language to standardize spelling (and was part of a larger project to westernize the country).

As a result of this state-mandated standardization of hiragana, variant kana have fallen into disuse in modern Japan, save for limited situations such as signboards, calligraphy, place names, and personal names. Today, those hiragana glyphs not used in school education since 1900 as a result of the script reform are called hentaigana.

History

thumb|Hentai iroha 47-ji (1886): an [[iroha kana syllabary written entirely in hentaigana]]

thumb|Comparison of the glyphs of hentaigana. From the left is the Meiji period, 1975, 2004 and 2017.

Hiragana, the main Japanese syllabic writing system, derived from a cursive form of man'yōgana, a system where Chinese ideograms (kanji) were used to write sounds without regard to their meaning. Originally, the same syllable (more precisely, mora) could be represented by several more-or-less interchangeable kanji, or different cursive styles of the same kanji. However, the 1900 script reform determined that only one specific character be used for each mora, with the rest being called hentaigana ("variant characters").

The 1900 standard included the hiragana ゐ, ゑ, and を, which historically stood for the phonetically distinct moras /wi/, /we/, and /wo/ but are currently pronounced as /i/, /e/, and /o/, identically to い, え, and お. These characters were deprecated by the 1946 spelling reform, except for the character を, which is still used in the Japanese writing system for the direct object particle /-o/.

Hentaigana are still used occasionally today in some contexts, such as store signs and logos, to achieve the "old-fashioned" or "traditional" look.

Katakana also has variant forms, such as 20px|class=skin-invert-image(ネ) and 20px|class=skin-invert-image(ヰ). However, katakana's variant forms are fewer than hiragana's. Katakana's choices of man'yōgana segments had stabilized early on and established – with few exceptions – an unambiguous phonemic orthography (one symbol per sound) long before the 1900 script regularization.

Standardized hentaigana

Before the proposal which led to the inclusion of hentaigana in Unicode 10.0, they were already standardized into a list by Mojikiban, part of the Japanese Information-technology Promotion Agency (IPA).

{| class="wikitable"

!

!a

!i

!u

!e

!o

|-

!

!

!

!

!

!

|-

! rowspan="1"|a

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! rowspan="2" |k

!

!

!

!

!

|-

|

|

!

!

|-

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! rowspan="2" |N

!

|-

|

|}

To view hentaigana, special fonts need to be installed that support Hentaigana such as:

  • BabelStone Han
  • IPA MJ Mincho (Version 5.01 and later)
  • Hanazono Mincho
  • Hanazono Mincho AFDKO
  • UniHentaiKana
  • Nishiki-teki
  • Noto Serif Hentaigana

The glyph for example Hiragana wu (𛄟) also needs a special font to display such as

  • Uraniwa Mincho X

Sources

Hentaigana are adapted from the reduced and cursive forms of the following man’yōgana (kanji) characters.

The Unicode block for Kana Supplement is U+1B000–U+1B0FF:

The Unicode block for Kana Extended-A is U+1B100–U+1B12F:

Modern usage

thumb|right|A [[soba restaurant: written right-to-left, the sign reads (). () equates to ("fresh soba"), and consists of the kanji () followed by hentaigana derived from the kanji () and (with dakuten: ). The black vertical text () equates to , the historical kana spelling of (, "long visit"), and consists of hentaigana derived from (), (with dakuten: ) and ().]]

While hentaigana started out as handwritten cursive variants of hiragana, they were used well into the modern era in printed books during the Meiji era, albeit with inconsistency. They occur sporadically in hiragana-heavy text. Some books were typeset with regular hiragana and their hentaigana variants on the same line. Here is a text sample from an 1893 book:

In this sample, is a variant of , and of , of , and of . Another book was typeset with two different spellings for the same phrase tatoe-ba: and . The same word, nashi, can be spelt with regular hiragana () and hentaigana () on the same page.

The choice between different hiragana and hentaigana could be contextual. For example, , and may be used at the beginning of a word, while , and may be used elsewhere, while was used extensively specifically for the topic particle.

Hentaigana are now considered obsolete, but a few marginal uses remain. For example, otemoto (chopsticks), is written in hentaigana on some wrappers and many soba shops use hentaigana to spell kisoba on their signs. (See also: "Ye Olde" for "the old" on English signs.)

Hentaigana are used in some formal handwritten documents, particularly in certificates issued by classical Japanese cultural groups (e.g., martial arts schools, etiquette schools, religious study groups, etc.). Also, they are occasionally used in reproductions of classic Japanese texts, akin to blackletter in English and other Germanic languages to give an archaic flair. Modern poems may be composed and printed in hentaigana for visual effect.

However, most Japanese people cannot read hentaigana nowadays, only recognizing a few from their common use in shop signs, or figuring them out from context.

Some of the following hentaigana are cursive forms of the same kanji as their standard hiragana counterparts, but simplified differently. Others descend from unrelated kanji that represent the same sound.

<gallery widths="100px" heights="100px" mode="nolines" class="skin-invert-image">

Hiragana_I_01.svg|

Hiragana_E_01.svg|

Hiragana_O_01.svg|

Hiragana_KA_01.svg|

Hiragana_KI_01.svg|

Hiragana_KO_01.svg|

Hiragana_SI_01.svg|

Hiragana_SU_01.svg|

Hiragana_TA_01.svg|

Hiragana_NA_01.svg|

Hiragana_NO_01.svg|

Hiragana_HA_01.svg|

Hiragana_YU_01.svg|

Hiragana_RE_01.svg|

Hiragana_RO_01.svg|

Hiragana_WA_01.svg|

</gallery>

See also

  • Furigana
  • Romaji

Notes

References

  • Chart of hentaigana calligraphy from O'Neill's A Reader of Handwritten Japanese
  • A chart of hentaigana hosted by Jim Breen of the WWWJDIC
  • Chart of kana from Engelbert Kaempfer circa 1693
  • Hentaigana on signs
  • L2/15-239 Proposal for Japanese HENTAIGANA - Unicode

<!-- * Koin Hentaigana Outlying Characters for MS Mincho Some are free, but some are commercial. Don't put it here.

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