: These are small marks added to characters to change their sound (e.g., changing "ka" to "ga").
Several prominent educational tools share this name or similar titles, which are often bundled in such archives:
: A popular game titled Let's Learn Japanese! Hiragana (developed by Dr. Cyril Splutterworth ) uses puzzles and arcade-style challenges to teach character recognition and pronunciation.
: Hiragana consists of 46 primary characters, each representing a specific syllable (except for the singular "n" sound).
: Let's Learn Hiragana: First Book of Basic Japanese Writing by Yasuko Kosaka Mitamura is a widely recognized self-study guide. It focuses on the 46 basic characters and their modified symbols through structured writing exercises.