Senin, 14 November 2011

Lesson Hangul Alphabet

Vowels : -


"a"
"ya"
"eo"
"yeo"
"o"










"yo"
"oo" or "u"
"yoo" or "yu"
"eu"
"i"



Consonants : -


"g" or "k"
"n"
"d" or "t"
" r " or " l "
"m"










"b" or "p"
"s"
-
" ch "
" ch' "











" g' " or " k' "
" d' "
" p' "
" h "


Note that " ' " means the letter is aspirated, i.e a sharp sound.

+
+
=
han

h
a
n









+
+
=
guk

g
u
k


한국 pronounced HanGuk meaning Korea

Lesson 2 Double Vowels (모음)





eir
yeir
ere
yere
wa
where
wo
weo

















weou
wei








Lesson 3 Use of Consonants (자음) and Vowels (모음)
= ka
= keo
= kyeo
= kya
= ki
= ko



= pa
= peo
= pu
= pyo
= chi
= cheo
= chu
= cho
= ma
= meo
= mo
= na
= neo
= i
= ya
= ti
= ko
= tya
= yo
= o
= to
= tu
= too
= ku


When constructing a word, you must add a mixture of consonants and vowels, beginning with the consonant at the beginning of the word. In some cases, there is no need to use a consonant at the beginning in which case
(null character) is used.
+


=
a
+
+
=
rum
+
+
=
kam
+
+
=
kkoong
+
+
=
ot
+
+
ㅂㅅ
=
eop
+
+
=
kkot
+
+
=
han
+
+
=
guk

More on constructing words

A syllable that consists of a consonant and a "vertical vowel" is written with the consonant on the left and the vowel on the right
+ =
n + a = na

A syllable that consists of a consonant and a "horizontal vowel" is written with the consonant on top and the vowel underneath:
+ =
m + o = mo

If a syllable has a consonant, vowel, and consonant, the final consonant, called patch'im (meaning "supporting floor" in Korean) goes to the bottom -- or floor -- of that syllable.
+ + =
m + a + n = man

khamsahamnida

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar