ㅂㅈㄷㄱㅅㅛㅕㅑㅐㅔㅁㄴㅇㄹㅎㅗㅓㅏㅣㅋㅌㅊㅍㅠㅜㅡ
But remember, they're always put together to form a true letter, then words.
And also every syllable is read clearly, no silent letters.
They vary in sound if added together, it's complicated at start but will be easier as you learn through it, and there is no V and F, so most koreans read them as B and P.
한국말 is the Hangul for "Korean".
theres
ㄱ /ㄴ/ ㄷ /ㄹ /ㅁ /ㅂ /ㅅ /ㅇ /ㅈ/ ㅊ/ ㅋ/ ㅌ/ ㅍ/ ㅎ/
g /n /d/ l/ m /b/ s/ o&y/ j/ ch/ k&c/ t/ p/ h/
*ㄹ,ㅅ(l,s) should be pronounced very softly.
ㄲ /ㄸ/ ㅃ/ ㅉ/ (harsh soundings >> ㄱ,ㄷ,ㅂ,ㅈ doubled)
gg /dd /bb /jj/
ㅏ .ㅑ . ㅓ. ㅕ . ㅗ. ㅛ . ㅜ. ㅠ. ㅡ. ㅣ
ah. yah. uh. yuh. oh. yo. ooh. yooh. eu. ee.
ㅐ ㅒ ㅔ ㅖ
ae /eeyeh/eh/ yeh
you combine them
like
너(nuh)
유(yooh)
사(sah)
its one letter for each syllables
아/야/어/여/오/요/우/유/으/이
ah/yah/uh/yuh/oh/yoh/ooh/yooh/eu/ee
가/갸/거/겨/고/교/구/규/그/기
ga/gyah/guh/gyuh/go/gyoh/gooh/gyooh/geu/gee
and then,.....
you comebine even more !!
악/안/앋/알/암/압/앗/
ahg(ahk)/ahn/ahd/ahl/ahm/ahb/ahs
앚/앛/앜/앝/앞/앟
ahj/ahch/ahk/aht/ahp/ah
and combine more more more !!
홋(hoht)
옷(oht) <<(by the wayy, doesn't this look like a person?)
회(hweh)
횅(hwehng)
앉(ahnj)
닮(dahlm)
닭(dahlg)
엵(yurg)
though this looks way too hard
and it looks like its almost impossible to pronounce,
but its just the limitation of English
its actually not that complicated!!
Korean can be really fun
since its characters are the world's best in indicating pronounciations
it can indicate every pronounciations in every languages
theres no limits to it.
the characters are made of the
shape of the vocal cords and mouths
pronouncing the characters' sound.
also, one syllable means one letter in Korean
so when writing in Korean,
it uses up space a lot less than most languages
(I think all the languages but who knows)
This is how you say them.
hello= anneong haseyo
bye (to person leaving)= anneong hi kaseyo
bye (to person staying)= anneong hi keseyo
sorry= mi an hapnida
excuse me= sy le hapnida
that's ok/your welcome= gwan chanayo
please= bu tak hapnida
just to clarify, huh...........
MYX (a music channel here in the Philippines) writes the lyrics of Korean songs in English alphabet in order for us to be able to read it, if they will write it on the Korean alphabet...... we, the viewers will have no idea what is written there and we will not be able to read it. but the way how MYX writes the Korean lyrics of Korean songs is not the real way how to write in Korean because Korea has its own way of writing the alphabet......... I'M JUST CLARIFYING THIS, GUYS.
Korean's writing system is called Hangul (한글) . It is made up of 14 consonants (ㄱ, ㄴ, ㄷ, ㄹ, ㅁ, ㅂ, ㅅ, ㅇ, ㅈ, ㅊ, ㅋ, ㅌ, ㅍ, ㅎ) and 10 vowels (ㅏ, ㅑ, ㅓ, ㅕ, ㅗ, ㅛ, ㅜ, ㅠ, ㅡ, ㅣ).
to adults: 안녕하세요
to friends: 안녕
Cinese characters are logograms used in the writing ofChinese, Japanese, Korean, and some other Asian languages. In Standard Chinese, they are called hànzì (simplifiedChinese: 汉字; traditional Chinese: 漢字, lit "Han characters"). ... Collectively, they are known as CJK characters.
Your Korean name can still be Michelle, if you'd like it to be. You would merely sound it out when writing it in Korean, writing with the appropriate characters that would match the sounds in "Michelle." This is how you would write "Michelle" in Korean Hangul: 미셸 Mi-Shyel
Yes, Korean words have characters! By:Laura Huynh
Pearl in Korean writing is : 진주
English: RaychelPronunciation: Re-i-chelHangul/ Korean Characters: ë ˆì´ì²¼
Chinese, Japanese and Korean all use Chinese characters for words, but each of these languages use them a bit differently. All three of these languages also can use Arabic numerals or Chinese characters to write numbers. Korean and Japanese languages share many commonalities in grammar and structure. Although Korean and Japanese use a lot of Chinese characters in writing, these two languages are drastically different from Chinese.
한나
Chris in Korean characters is 크리스
Korean characters do not show up properly on WikiAnswers. But see the Related Link.
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