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Tuesday, December 09, 2008

How to Read & Write Korean


Many of you might be thinking that Korean is very difficult to read or write as it contains all kinds of drawings like Chinese. But in actual it is not like Chinese, it can be considered one of the simplest script, and
You can learn in few hours. If you practice for a day, that would be more than enough. After suggestion from one of my friend I thought of going for it. I got some link from Google search which seemed to be to be pretty good, and learned in two days. I am sharing my learning here, so that may be it would also make you interested in learning how to read and write Korean.

Below is the alphabets and in brackets is the pronunciation of the same. The first 14 are consonants and rest 10 are vowels. In vowels you can see that with little modification of first you get other vowel, which are similar in pronunciation. Every character thus shown has a wired name in Korean, forget about that, remember the pronunciation.The alphabet was invented in 1443 during the reign of the Great King Sejong. There are 14 basic consonants and 10 basic vowels. Letters that have similar sounds also have similar shapes, so it is easy to learn.

The letters are grouped into syllable blocks containing an initial consonant (which may be silent or double), one or two vowels (below or to the right), and sometimes a final consonant (below), as shown in the below syllable

I will give you an Example of a station name, you can see in the below figure. If you see the first syllable, its (s+eo) - refer to above table and (ch+o) = Seocho. So happy reading Korean.

You may find some more letters, which are not very common, so this must give a good insight in to 99% korean words, and there may be cases with four letters in one syllables and which is also as simple to read as one explained above. If a letter is repeated, then you have to stress that word, as in bitter.

Even if don't know many Korean words, you can have still have fun "decoding" some words in a Korean text, such as words borrowed from English, the names of famous people, place names, and product brand names. I have learned to read and write Korean from this Site
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1 comments:

Hiralal said...

Bhai, bahut sahi hai korean sikh ne keliye