1. Understand the structure of Korean characters.
For beginners, the first thing to do is to understand the character structure of Korean.
All Korean characters are in the structure of A+B or A+B+C. Here A=consonant, B=vowel, C=consonant (final rhyme). When writing, the consonant is written first, then the vowel, and finally
Write radio.
The order of writing is left first then right, first up then down.
Compared with Chinese, Korean does not have to deal with strokes (because the letters are very simple and there is no complicated stroke order).
So writing Korean is still very simple.
2. Learn the pronunciation of Korean.
Korean is a phonetic script, which means that when you see a word, you can spell it out based on its composition. Unlike Chinese, which requires a separate pinyin system.
The advantage of this kind of phonetic writing is that once you memorize the phonetic symbols, you can read all Korean words, although you may not know a single word.
A Korean character is mainly composed of three parts, vowels, consonants and phonics. The phonics are played by part of the consonants.
There are 21 vowels, 19 consonants, and 40 phonetic symbols.
Many of their sounds are very similar to Chinese, and individual phonetic symbols can be fully mastered after a period of practice.
Generally speaking, after a week, it will not be a problem to memorize all the phonetic symbols and read all the Korean words.
3. Increase Korean vocabulary.
If you want to learn Korean better, vocabulary is very important. Just like learning English, vocabulary is very important for every language. Therefore, to learn Korean, we need to continuously increase our vocabulary.
learning, so as to better improve the ability to learn Korean.
4. Understand Korean grammar.
In Korean grammar, the linking suffix can be connected after the predicate or after the aspect word.
The connective ending of a predicate is connected to the predicate stem, connecting predicates, phrases, and clauses, and expressing the relationship between the connected components.
In a sentence, a connecting suffix expresses only one relationship.
However, there are many connecting suffixes with multiple functions.
Therefore, when the same suffix is ??placed in different sentences or used in different predicates, it may play different roles.
The linking word of the aspect word ends in the form of "aspect word +?".
: Korean, Korean, the native language of the Korean Peninsula, with 77 million speakers.
Korean belongs to an isolated language family, and its grammar has no similarity with any other language. Historically, it has been marked with Chinese characters and integrated into Chinese vocabulary. In 1443, King Sejong created Korean writing that was highly consistent with Korean.
Due to the improvement of South Korea's international status, according to the United Nations' "2005 World Major Languages, Distribution, Application and Influence Survey", the international influence of Korean ranks ninth in the world.
South Korea (also known as South Korea or South Korea) is called Korean (/Hanyu), North Korea (also known as North Korea or North Korea) is called Korean, (/Korean), which are Seoul standard pronunciation and Pyongyang standard pronunciation respectively. Both are actually North Korea.
The two sovereign states of the Korean Peninsula in the north and south of the peninsula, with the Korean nation as the main ethnic group but different political systems, use different customary names for a language.
The Korean language family is generally classified as an isolated language with an undetermined language family.