Help:Contents

Welcome to the Help Page. If you have any questions not answered here, please post your question in the Community Portal.

Rules

 * Rules

Searching
All articles can be found by navigating through the Categories on the Main Page (eventually).

Digimon

 * List of Digimon (original, Japanese names)
 * List of Dub Names (digimon listed by their English Dub name, not complete)

Characters (Pages Not Working Yet)

 * Characters in the various digimon series can be found by searching:
 * Original (Japanese) name: Surname first, Given second (ex: Yagami Taichi)
 * Original name: Given name only (ex: Taichi)
 * Dub name: Given name first, Surname last: (ex: Tai Kamiya)
 * Dub name: Given name only (ex: Tai)

Episodes & Chapters (Pages Not Working Yet)

 * Episodes/Chapters can be found by searching the following abbreviations:

Page Formatting

 * Digimon Page Format
 * Character Page Format
 * Episode Page Format
 * Chapter Page Format
 * Item Page Format
 * Location Page Format

Brief
In brief, in Modern Japanesse there are 3 main writing styles, all of which are used interchangeably - Kanji, Hiragana and Katakana. The Hiragana and Katakana both belong to the same phonological syllabary alphabet and are both independent kana systems - each consisting of 46 base characters, but have different linguistic utilities:


 * Kanji: Ideographic/logogrammatic characters originating from China that have a base meaning and can be combined with other kanji to create new meanings.
 * Hiragana: Simple characters, mainly used for words for which there are no kanji, including particles and suffixes.
 * Katakana: In modern Japanese, katakana are mainly use for transcription of words from foreign languages (ie English) and occasionally kanji words, onomatopoeia, technical and scientific terms amongst others.

Because Katakana and Hiragana are both used prominently within the Digimon franchise, a table of both Hiragana and Katakana characters is listed below in order to facilitate fabricating transcripted text when editing on Wikimon and as a local source of interpretation of how the writing system operates for some individuals.