ち, in hiragana, or チ in katakana, is one of the Japanese kana, which each represent one mora. The symbol looks like a cheese ball with a toothpick stuck in it (for some reason, there's another line added to the toothpick), so "chi" for cheese. Japanese writing Kanji æ¼¢å Kana ä»®å Hiragana 平仮å Katakana çä»®å Uses Furigana æ¯ãä»®å Okurigana éãä»®å RÅmaji ãã¼ãå Hiragana ) are a Japanese syllabary, one of the four Japanese writing systems, along with katakana, kanji and rÅmaji. ... Japanese writing Kanji æ¼¢å Kana ä»®å Hiragana 平仮å Katakana çä»®å Uses Furigana æ¯ãä»®å Okurigana éãä»®å RÅmaji ãã¼ãå Katakana (çä»®å) are a Japanese syllabary, one of the four Japanese writing systems. ... Japanese writing Kanji æ¼¢å Kana ä»®å Hiragana 平仮å Katakana çä»®å Uses Furigana æ¯ãä»®å Okurigana éãä»®å RÅmaji ãã¼ãå For other meanings of Kana, see Kana (disambiguation). ... Mora (plural moras or morae) is a unit of sound used in phonology that determines syllable weight (which in turn determines stress) in some languages. ...