There have been efforts to replace Japan's writing system with something "simpler." Indeed, one group fought for over a hundred years to replace kanji and the kana syllabaries with Latin characters. Here's why they ultimately threw in the towel.
There have been efforts to replace Japan's writing system with something "simpler." Indeed, one group fought for over a hundred years to replace kanji and the kana syllabaries with Latin characters. Here's why they ultimately threw in the towel. 3 comments
@nikunashi Idk, strings of pure hiragana are pretty hard to parse, at least in reading. Some kind of delimiter would come in really handy, if Japanese is to become a kana-only language. |
@unseenjapan
I wouldn't necessarily go with romaji (and apparently no one else either), but dumping kanji would certainly simplify things a heck of a lot!
If Japan went with a just a kana based system it would be so, so much easier to learn. Switching to single blocks for the compound syllables could even retain a lot of compactness.
The added complexity is glaring when you compare it to learning Korean.