When I first watched the video I thought there was no difference but as the video goes on I realized that the Hiragana has more curve while the Katakana is straight. This could be completely different though in a different font. 😂
@@aladdin8423you can use different keyboards on your computer and phone if you have them installed. かきくけこ I have a Japanese keyboard installed just for the occasional convenience.
Wait wait wait... there's a difference between へ and ヘ?!! I watched the video and I'm still blown away by how she could get a perfect ten~! Sasuga Nenechi~!
The font used by the quiz has a subtle but noticeable difference in the long arms of each character if you look carefully. The hiragana version slightly curves inward while the katakana one is straighter.
@@BadingadingNo nene explained that the hiragana one went ひゃん〜 and the katakana one went へぇん. I think probably. Maybe. Anyways sasuga nenechi 上手 master explained it perfectly
I didn't know about this either (or maybe I forgot), but you can see a difference on the characters you typed if you look closely, just like @Badingading said.
i only barely had enough time to really, _really_ spot the difference between the two ways of writing へ and ヘ, and i was answering the questions correctly with her at the end
wow I can't believe I learned too, I got every question right as soon as I noticed the difference, I always though both of them were the same since they have the same pronunciation.
So it looks to me like if they kept going one would curve outward and the other inward other than that I swear the angle for a bit cm of those questions was exactly the same
I've always written both versions of 'he' the same. Time to amend that mistake. Second kana I derp about - at first I derped with the 'ka' when I gave the upper curve a straight top line and hard sharp corner in hiragana.
It's the long stroke. The Katakana one is a straight line, while the Hiragana one bent downward ever so slightly. It's subtle but if you look closely, the difference is obvious enough. But idk if that's the standard writing or that's just how the font for the game is.
It has 0 effect, they are the same sound and he would never appear by itself except as a hiragana particle anyway. It's baffling there even is a difference between katakana/hiragana he at all.
This is an extremely pedantic thing that has 0 impact on using, reading, or speaking the language in any meaningful way. You could never even notice the two hes are different and it won't matter. Now go learn pitch accent, lol.
Took me several moments to spot the difference. The curvature of the long stroke determines it's sound, and it's so slight 95% of earth's population would miss it and if the font is small, you'd need to rely wholly on the context of its use to decipher which one it is. People say English is tough to learn with all it's weird exceptions, but things like this right here are why it takes the average learner 4 years to be conversationally fluent in Japanese.
Except for the fact that they make the exact same sound, so you can still read it either way. And I'm relatively certain that you could figure out if it's the katakana one by it being with other katakana to form a word, since I'd assume that a singular katakana "he" wouldn't really have any use, given what katakana is used for.
Nene is the embodiment of fun lol.
The absolute confidence nene brings to everything she does is such a joy.
Now imagine trying to understand Chloe's handwriting for this kanji
Kana, not kanji
There is the hiragana へ and the katakana ヘ, but no Kanji. I think the most similar triple-match is かカ力
Impressive. Very nice. Now let's see 力 and カ.
That's easy. If you wash a 力 in hot water, it becomes a カ.
And if you squish a カ between two walls, it becomes a カ.
And if you bring a カ into the deep sea, it becomes a ヵ
When I first watched the video I thought there was no difference but as the video goes on I realized that the Hiragana has more curve while the Katakana is straight. This could be completely different though in a different font. 😂
Hiragana is from cursive Kanji and Katakana is from parts of regular Kanji. So generally, hiragana would be more cursive, even for へ.
I just remember that both of them are from the chinese character 乀.
@@lexsongtwbro what is that chinese character? How did u even type that (probably googled)
@@aladdin8423it's one of the basic strokes, should be in the japanese radical list when you hit up takoboto or jisho even
@@aladdin8423you can use different keyboards on your computer and phone if you have them installed.
かきくけこ
I have a Japanese keyboard installed just for the occasional convenience.
Wait wait wait... there's a difference between へ and ヘ?!! I watched the video and I'm still blown away by how she could get a perfect ten~! Sasuga Nenechi~!
The font used by the quiz has a subtle but noticeable difference in the long arms of each character if you look carefully. The hiragana version slightly curves inward while the katakana one is straighter.
@@Badingading This is the answer I was looking for. Thank you! Take my upvote!
@@BadingadingNo nene explained that the hiragana one went ひゃん〜 and the katakana one went へぇん. I think probably. Maybe. Anyways sasuga nenechi 上手 master explained it perfectly
@@attchi50 LoL, true true. Wait till I explain this to my friends and watch their faces - "No no, this is the はうん one." 😆
I didn't know about this either (or maybe I forgot), but you can see a difference on the characters you typed if you look closely, just like @Badingading said.
The hiragana へ bends inwards while the katakana ヘ bends outwards, although that could just be how the Japanese font used in the quiz represents them.
i remember she can do Calligraphy quite good.
Nene being legit impressive and absolutely adorable as always.
Thank you for translating this!
Thankyou for the upload!
WHAT THE ACTUAL FUCK
へ
ヘ
ほんとだ!
i only barely had enough time to really, _really_ spot the difference between the two ways of writing へ and ヘ, and i was answering the questions correctly with her at the end
this is very cute especially during heh and hau moment
The best part? Her phonetics _match_ the stroke! 'Hyan' has a "curve" to it that 'hen' doesn't. 🤯
Corporate wants you to...
SHUT UP! URUSEI! FUSA KENNA OMAE! AREYUNEI YONE!
Now do it in Comic Sans.
thanks for subtitles !
Miko taking notes to become Hololive JP
Neat TY Nene sweetheart.
They do look similar so it easy to misread those symbols.
正直、日本人の私でもヘコんでる/ふくらんでる、の違いがあるのは知らんかったわ
Wow I just noticed the slight curve. It's so subtle. Amazing.
if only I could get nihongo master super-nene-chi to teach me japanese, I'd be fluent already!
unironically a useful tip
Ok, that's an information I probably won't ever need, but it is a good fun fact.
WHAT THE DIFFERENT WTF
one of them has a slightly sharper bend, but it's like a 2 degrees difference so i cant see it either :D
wow I can't believe I learned too, I got every question right as soon as I noticed the difference, I always though both of them were the same since they have the same pronunciation.
So it looks to me like if they kept going one would curve outward and the other inward other than that I swear the angle for a bit cm of those questions was exactly the same
I can only imagine all the English viewers wondering WTF is happening
When she said she was the nihongo master I felt that
god she's adorableeeeeeeee.. i wanna hug her!
Osoroshi... nihongo ga
Gotta love 50/50
So it depends on who's writing it...
Corporate wants you to find the difference between this kana and this kana...
I've always written both versions of 'he' the same. Time to amend that mistake. Second kana I derp about - at first I derped with the 'ka' when I gave the upper curve a straight top line and hard sharp corner in hiragana.
Look at our wife go
that part was so funny
it fun reading comment of people unable to see da different 😅
Lmaaooo what?!?
Should've done it in different fonts too...
They're the same picture...
I'm less confused but still confused :(
6/10, noice
Does the Katakana one have a sharper -point- bend than the Hiragana one?
It's the long stroke.
The Katakana one is a straight line, while the Hiragana one bent downward ever so slightly.
It's subtle but if you look closely, the difference is obvious enough.
But idk if that's the standard writing or that's just how the font for the game is.
To what extent does this affect your day to day? They both pronounce "he". Are there any instances where using the slight detail matters?
It has 0 effect, they are the same sound and he would never appear by itself except as a hiragana particle anyway. It's baffling there even is a difference between katakana/hiragana he at all.
Apa ini 😂😂😂
..i couldn't tell the difference...
Kaigai Niki - Nene Teaches Important Japanese. NENE-CHAN NO OPPAI WA UTSUKUSHII = Nene-chan CUTE. wwww
Learn Japanese they said
It will be fun they said
It is with Nene.
This is an extremely pedantic thing that has 0 impact on using, reading, or speaking the language in any meaningful way. You could never even notice the two hes are different and it won't matter.
Now go learn pitch accent, lol.
@@aw2031zap it was a joke ?
When a language couldn't find another proper way to differentiate its charaters, it'll become like this. lol
lIlIIlIllIIl
Illicit
wait there's a difference?
Katakana = straight, hiragana = slightly bent downward at the "leg"
there is but it doesn't matter
I still don't see the difference. lol
would be nice if you reduced the damn sub's shadow, this is hard af to read
Did she think this through? She's basically explaining Japanese in japanese.
Took me several moments to spot the difference. The curvature of the long stroke determines it's sound, and it's so slight 95% of earth's population would miss it and if the font is small, you'd need to rely wholly on the context of its use to decipher which one it is.
People say English is tough to learn with all it's weird exceptions, but things like this right here are why it takes the average learner 4 years to be conversationally fluent in Japanese.
Lol i don't think that differentiating へ and ㇸ is what stops people from learning conversational japanese
Except for the fact that they make the exact same sound, so you can still read it either way.
And I'm relatively certain that you could figure out if it's the katakana one by it being with other katakana to form a word, since I'd assume that a singular katakana "he" wouldn't really have any use, given what katakana is used for.
I learned from duolingo and i failed, i will just learn the romaji then, since i am currently give up to learn these for now
I would advise you not to. Use Hiragana/Katakana early on will be very useful! And don't worry it's super easy you will get used to it
hiragana and katakana takes less than a week to learn, you will never learn japanese if you stick to romaji
I guess i'll learn hiragana first then, thanks for the advice guys
@immanuelsky4982 learning the kana on duolingo is fairly boring, but it is doable.
You'll be surprised how fast you'll pick it up