Ha (kana)
Ha is one of the Japanese kana, each of which represent one mora. Both represent. They are also used as a grammatical particle and serve as the topic marker of the sentence. は originates from 波 and ハ from 八.
In the Sakhalin dialect of the Ainu language, the katakana ハ can be written as small ㇵ to represent a final h sound after an a sound. This, along with other extended katakana, was developed by Japanese linguists to represent sounds in Ainu not present in standard Japanese katakana.
When used as a particle, は is pronounced as わ . は is also pronounced as わ in some words.
| Form | Rōmaji | Hiragana | Katakana |
| Normal h- | ha | は | ハ |
| Normal h- | haa hā | はあ, はぁ はー | ハア, ハァ ハー |
| Addition dakuten b- | ba | ば | バ |
| Addition dakuten b- | baa bā | ばあ, ばぁ ばー | バア, バァ バー |
| Addition handakuten p- | pa | ぱ | パ |
| Addition handakuten p- | paa pā | ぱあ, ぱぁ ぱー | パア, パァ パー |
Stroke order
[Image:は-bw.png|200px|right|Stroke order in writing は]The Hiragana は is made with three strokes:
- A vertical line on the left side with a small curve.
- A horizontal stroke near the center.
- A vertical stroke on the right at the center of the second stroke followed by a loop near the end.
The Katakana ハ is made with two strokes:
- A straight stroke from the top pointing towards the bottom left.
- Another straight stroke going the opposite way, i.e. from the top to the bottom right
Other communicative representations
- Full Braille representation
- Computer encodings