Postby rayman.the.one.and.only1_498570 » November 14th, 2014 5:49 pm
I'm not sure I understand the question entirely, but Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji are all a part of Japanese. They are just writing systems used when writing things down/typing them etc. for instance the Japanese word for I or me, you can write it in kanji 私, katakana ワタシ, or in hiragana わたし, and it will still represent the spoken word "watashi" Does that make any sense? Of course I'm simplifying this a bit, but basically all Kanji, Hiragana, and katakana is, is a way to take spoken words Japanese and making them words you can read and write as well as speak. (Like if someone were to ask if letters were a part of English or if they are something else, the answer is that Letters in the alphabet are just a way to write our words down.) does that make sense? Hope this helps at all.