1. Understand Korean word structure. For beginners, the first step is to understand the word structure of Korean. All Korean words are A+B or A+B+C, where A=consonants, B=vowels, and C=consonants (rhyming endings) are written with consonants, then vowels, and finally consonants. The order of writing is left then right, up then down. Compared to Chinese, Korean doesn't have the problem of strokes (because the letters are very simple and there is no complicated order of strokes). So Korean is still easy to write.
2. Learn Korean phonetics. Korean is a phonetic language, which means that when you see a word, you can spell it out according to its composition, unlike Chinese, which requires a separate pinyin system. The advantage of this phonetic system is that once you have memorized the phonetic symbols, you can read all the words in Korean, even though you may not know any of them. A Korean character consists of three main parts, the vowels, the consonants and the consonants, which are held by some of the consonants. There are 21 vowels, 19 consonants, and ***40 phonemes. Many of their sounds are extremely similar to Chinese, and individual phonemes can be fully mastered after a period of practice. Generally speaking, after a week, it is not a problem to memorize all the phonetic symbols and read all the Korean words.
3. Increase your Korean vocabulary. If you want to learn Korean better, vocabulary is very important, just like learning English, vocabulary is very important for all languages, therefore, to learn Korean, we need to keep increasing our vocabulary learning so that we can better improve our ability to learn Korean.
4. Understand Korean grammar. In Korean grammar, the end of a conjunction can come after the predicate or after a body word. The conjunctive endings of predicates are attached to the stem of the predicate to connect predicates, phrases, and clauses, and to indicate the relationship between the connected components. In a sentence, a conjunctive ending indicates only one relation. However, there are many endings that serve multiple purposes. Therefore, the same word ending may have different functions when it is put into different sentences or when it is used in different predicates. The conjunctive endings of corpora are attached to the "corpora + ?" form. form.
:Korean, Korean, the native language of the Korean Peninsula, spoken by 77 million people.
Korean is an isolated language with a grammar that bears no resemblance to any other language, historically marked with Chinese characters and incorporating Chinese vocabulary, and in 1443 King Sejong the Great created the Korean script, which is highly compatible with the Korean language.
Due to Korea's rising international status, the Korean language ranked ninth in the world in terms of international influence, according to the United Nations' 2005 Survey of the World's Major Languages, Distribution, Utilization and Influence.
South Korea (also known as South Korea or South Korea) is called Korean (/Korean), and North Korea (also known as North Korea or North Korea) is called Korean, (/Korean), respectively, for the Seoul Standard and Pyongyang Standard, the two are actually the north and south of the Korean Peninsula to the Korean people as the main ethnic group, but the political system is different in the Korean Peninsula sovereign state on the different habitual name of a language. The Korean language family is generally categorized as an isolated language with an undefined language family.
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