Articles are titled and written in contemporary Japanese syllabic writing.
This period saw Western-style punctuation marks introduced into Japanese writing.
I'm accustomed to that when I try to decipher Japanese writing.
Kanji is one of the three forms of Japanese writing.
This is because over the years the older character became lost due to the need to simplify/unify the Chinese characters used in Japanese writing.
This was an integral part of the postwar reform of Japanese national writing.
I admired a nice calligraphy brush perfect for practicing my Japanese writing, but it was priced at $4,500.
One box was marked with Japanese writing and he carefully pulled it down, finding it surprisingly heavy.
Panels and pages are typically read from right to left, consistent with traditional Japanese writing.
These pencils produced very fine lines, as opposed to traditional Japanese writing that varied in thickness and was vertical.