Most Asian languages don't use an alphabet, E.g. chinese, japanese, traditional korean. They use characters which are basically pictorial representations of words. Each character has the phonological equivalence of a syllable, and a character can have multiple meanings, just like a word in English does as well. Anything to do with an alphabet, e.g. pin yin, is basically a western influence, to help people decipher the tones better.
If you were to learn say chinese, first you would need to learn the pronunciations of all the possible syllables (or sound bytes), and then link them to their corresponding pictorial characters, and then link the characters to their semantic meaning. Twice as hard as english in my opinion, since knowing the sound will not enable you to write the write the characters, i.e. words.
There are such things similar to suffixes and prefixes when it comes to drawing the characters, where certain combinations of strokes form radicals, e.g. 3 dots draw vertically downward suggests something to do with water.
This is a list of all the syllables in chinese:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhuyin_tablethe best way is to just buy yourself a language textbook I guess..