
Korean is used in the Korean peninsula and the languages used in the Northeast of China, the Far East of Russia, Japan, and other Korean ethnic groups or Korean ethnic communities. Just in China In 1897, before the establishment of the Korean Empire, the language was only called "Korean" or "Dongyu." After the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, which belongs to the socialist camp, was the sole legal government of the entire Korean peninsula. Therefore, all the words about the Korean culture and country in China and the North Korean Peninsula are referred to as "North Korea." The language thus continues to be called "Korean." However, in 1992, after the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and the Republic of Korea, the direct cultural and economic exchanges with the Republic of Korea developed rapidly. The capital of the Republic of Korea flowed into China in large quantities. The textbooks and dictionaries of the language were issued in the name of "Korean" and the content was Korean. Mainly. Therefore, the terms "Korean" and "Korean" are now more common in China.
Hangul is the official alphabet of Korean language used in South Korea and North Korea. The Korean alphabet consists of 19 consonants and 21 vowels, for a total of 40 major letters. There are also some outdated characters and combination characters, but the main letter is 40 letters. However, unlike English, letters are combined into blocks of usually 2 to 3 characters per syllable. The most interesting feature of the Korean alphabet is the design of the letters. The shape of each letter is designed according to the sound characteristics they represent. Consonants are based on the shape of the mouth when you pronounce, and vowels are made from horizontal or vertical lines that are easily identifiable. Each consonant has its own name. For example, ᄀ is called giyeok (기역). The vowels are named only by the sound they emit, such as “ah ㄚ”ᅡ. Korean writing is different from most writing systems. Although Korean is an alphabet (one of which mainly corresponds to a sound), the letters are not written linearly. Instead, they are grouped into syllable blocks.




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