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Hangul and is
In Korea, the Hangul alphabet was created by Sejong the Great Hangul is a unique alphabet: it is a featural alphabet, where many of the letters are designed from a sound's place of articulation ( P to look like the widened mouth, L to look like the tongue pulled in, etc.
Korean is copiously attested from the mid-15th century on in the phonetically precise Hangul system of writing ( ib.
Hangul ( ; transcribed as Han-geul in South Korea ), also known as Chosŏn ' gŭl () in North Korea, is the native alphabet of the Korean language.
When used as an English word, it is often rendered without the diacritics: hangul, often capitalized as Hangul.
The guiding text for Hangul orthography is called Hangeul Machumbeop, whose last South Korean revision was published in 1988 by the Ministry of Education.
* In Korea, the Hunminjeongeum ( 1446 ) is discovered, explaining the basis of the Hangul alphabet.
Ko Gi-Hyun ( Hangul: 고기현, Hanja: 高基鉉 ) ( born May 11, 1986 ) is a South Korean short track speed skater.
The most notable cultural event of this era is the promulgation of the Korean alphabet Hangul by King Sejong the Great in 1446.
In Korea, the phoenix is called bulsajo ( Hanja: 不死鳥 Hangul: 불사조 ) literally meaning " immortal bird ", and the East Asian variant is called bonghwangsae ( Hangul: 봉황새 Hanja: 鳳凰새 ).
In the Korean language, it is also 金曜日 ( Hangul: 금요일, Romanization: geumyoil ), formed from " gold " + " day " from Korean pronunciation of the Chinese characters ).
Hangul, the Korean language writing system, is an example of an alphabet that was designed to replace the logogrammic hanja in order to increase literacy.
Soju ( Hangul 소주 ; Hanja 燒酒 ) is a distilled beverage's native name for shōchū in Korea.
In Korean, it is called " jumeok bap " ( Hangul: 주먹밥 ) or " samgak gimbap " ( Hangul: 삼각김밥 ), literally " fist-rice " or " triangle-seaweed-rice ," respectively.
Its supposed publication date, October 9, 1446, is now Hangul Day in South Korea.
Hangul is now the native writing system of Korean.
In South Korea, kamaboko is called either eomuk ( Hangul:, mixed script: ) or odeng ( 오뎅, loan word from the Japanese oden, a Japanese dish that sometimes contains kamaboko ).
Saeujeot ( hangul: 새우젓 ) or myeolchijeot is not added to the kimchi spice-seasoning mixture, but is simmered first to reduce odors, eliminate tannic flavor and fats, and then is mixed with a thickener made of rice or wheat starch ( Hangul: 풀 ).

Hangul and alphabet
However, instead of being written sequentially like the letters of the Latin alphabet, Hangul letters are grouped into blocks, such as 한 han, each of which transcribes a syllable.
* Hangul alphabet in Korea
* King Sejong the Great establishes Hangul as the native alphabet of the Korean language.
King Sejong the Great ( 1418 – 1450 ) implemented numerous administrative, social, and economical reforms, established royal authority in the early years of the dynasty, and promulgated Hangul, the Korean alphabet.
King Sejong the Great profoundly impacted Korean history with his introduction of hangul, the native phonetic alphabet system for the Korean language .< ref > Kim Jeong Su ( 1990 ), << 한글의 역사와 미래 >>( History and Future of Hangul ) ISBN 10 – 8930107230 </ ref >
* Transcription of the jamo ㅐ in the Hangul alphabet of the Korean language
Hangul Day — also called Hangul Proclamation Day or Korean Alphabet Day — is a Korean national commemorative day marking the invention and the proclamation of hangul ( 한글 ), the native alphabet of the Korean language, by King Sejong the Great.
* ᅇ, an obsolete unit of the Hangul alphabet
These names either are Latin letters with diacritics ( ñ, é ) or are written in languages or scripts which do not use the Latin alphabet: Arabic, Hangul, Hiragana and Kanji for instance.
Hangul, a phonemic Korean alphabet invented around 1446 by scholars in the court of King Sejong, was used little for several centuries because of the perceived cultural superiority of Classical Chinese ( a position similar to that of Latin in Europe ).
* Hangul ( Korean alphabet ) and its romanizations also use double consonants, which indicate faucalized voice.
For people and systems using non-Latin scripts ( such as Arabic, Bengali, Chinese, Cyrillic, Devanagari, Greek, Hangul, and Japanese ), the English alphabet may be unavailable or difficult to use, understand, or correctly interpret.
In 2009, the Cia-Cia tribe in Bau-Bau city began to use the Korean Hangul alphabet for their language, based on textbooks created by the Hunminjeongeum Society, a linguistic society in Seoul.

Hangul and 24
Shinhwa ( Hangul: 신화, Hanja: 神話 ) is a South Korean boy band that debuted on 24 March 1998 with six members: Eric Mun, Lee Min-woo, Kim Dong-wan, Shin Hye-sung, Jun Jin and Andy Lee.

Hangul and consonant
# REDIRECT Hangul consonant and vowel tables
# REDIRECT Hangul consonant and vowel tables
# REDIRECT Hangul consonant and vowel tables
# REDIRECT Hangul consonant and vowel tables

Hangul and vowel
Hangul has a few vowel trigraphs, ㅙ and ㅞ ( from oai and uei ), which are not entirely predictable.

Hangul and letters
* Seven pages written in Classical Chinese, except where the Hangul letters are mentioned, as can be seen in the image at the top of this article.
Hangul letters are detailed in several separate parts of the Unicode specification:
Hangumdo is a style that bases its techniques on the shape of the Hangul letters.

Hangul and .
These diacritics, known as Bangjeom ( 방점 ; 傍點 ), were used to mark pitch accents in Hangul for Middle Korean.
The rulers of Goguryeo ( 37 BC-668 AD ) used the title of Taewang ( Hangul: 태왕, Hanja: 太王 ), literally translated as the Greatest of the Kings.
However, King Gojong used term of " His Majesty the Great Monarch " ( Hangul: 대군주폐하, Hanja: 大君主陛下 ) not officlal imperial title.
* The modern name Hangul () was coined by Ju Sigyeong in 1912.
Until the early twentieth century, Hangul was denigrated as vulgar by the literate elite who preferred the traditional hanja writing system.
After the Gabo Reform in 1894, the Joseon Dynasty and later the Korean Empire started to write all official documents in Hangul.
Under the government's management, proper usage of Hangul and Hanja, including orthography, was discussed, until Korean Empire was annexed by Japan in 1910.
The Government-General of Korea popularized the writing style of a mixture of Hanja and Hangul which was used in later Joseon dynasty.
The Hangul Society, originally founded by Ju Si-gyeong, announced a proposal for a new, strongly morphophonemic orthography in 1933, which became the prototype of the contemporary orthographies in both North and South Korea.
Japanese and Korean share the same ancient Chinese words ' 月曜日 ' ( Hiragana: げつようび, Hangul: 월요일 ) for Monday which means day of the moon.
Click on image to view Hangul signs.

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