Add to basket
Item details
Shipping & delivery
This item will be posted to you by MochiPan within 3 days of receiving payment.
Shipping destination | Cost | Additional items |
---|---|---|
United Kingdom | £1.50 | £0.50 |
EU & Northern Ireland | Doesn't deliver here | |
United States | £3.00 | £1.00 |
Rest of the World | £3.00 | £1.00 |
You have 14 days, from receipt, to notify the seller if you wish to cancel your order or exchange an item.
Unless faulty, the following types of items are non-refundable: items that are personalised, bespoke or made-to-order to your specific requirements; items which deteriorate quickly (e.g. food), personal items sold with a hygiene seal (cosmetics, underwear) in instances where the seal is broken; digital items.
Please note that if your order is being posted outside mainland UK, you (or the recipient) may have to pay customs or VAT charges and a handling fee. The seller is not responsible for any charges or fees that may incur.
Full description
Learning Japanese?
Learning Katakana and Hiragana?
Then you need the MochiPan Kana (Japanese Alphabets) Pencil Case!
This is an original MochiPan design, featuring cute illustrations and all characters from Katakana and Hiragana printed on it, for those blank moments in class...
Each zipper has a little charm on it, and your pencil case is fully lined in a complementary print. The Kana print is designed by MochiPan and printed by Spoonflower, so it's great quality!
N.B. Japanese has three writing forms. Two are phonetic (i.e. each character has one individual sound, like in the English alphabet) and these are called Katakana and Hiragana.
Katakana is used mostly for words adopted from foreign languages (like television - terebi - テレビ) and hiragana is used for other Japanese words (like hello (on the phone) - moshi moshi - もしもし).
Then, Japanese also uses characters called Kanji (which came originally from China and are often very similar) which can have different sounds and can be used for different words many times (like tea - cha - 茶)
When learning Japanese, you normally begin with katakana and hiragana, as all Japanese can be written in these alphabets. Kanji is for advanced students only!
Designed by Emily Whittaker
More items from this category