Feel like asking questions to a Korean?
Check the link out.
PS. You should use perfect grammar when you e-mail this dude. He seems picky about stuff. He claims that he’s an immigrant who learned English when he was 16 and speaks it well, and therefore other Americans shouldn’t use bad grammar. Sorta weird, but… yeah.. Nonetheless the blog is interesting.
If you are a Korean person with a good sense of humor, you’d love this blog.
BTW, you might want to be a Korean who had lived abroad for a bit of time to get the sarcasm/humor part of this blog. If you’re just a fobby Korean-Korean, you’d probably not understand the sarcasm/humor and possibly be offended.
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I wish to add some more notes.
ㅇ= ng when it is at the bottom. If it’s a beginning consonant, it’s not pronounced (like a spanish h) The reason behind this is due to the structure of Hangeul. If you want to begin with a vowel sound, you will need to place ㅇ where the beginning consonant needs to be.
the double consonants: ㄲ/ㄸ/ㅃ/ㅆ/ㅉ. These can be thought of as the Spanish equivalents.
ㄲ -> Spanish C or K
ㄸ -> Spanish T
ㅃ -> Spanish P
ㅆ -> Spanish/English S… the strong S sound. Normally heard in English when a word begins with an S followed immediately by a vowel. (As in “Sound” or “Save” but not “Spanish”)
ㅉ -> I can’t place an equivalent for this one… strong tch/j sound…? not too much “tch” because that can sound like ㅊ instead…
(via chiam)
dave, you stated study korean? :) owsome !
correction : ㄱ = G, K / ㄷ = D / ㅂ=B /
*but there’s no correct answer. have different sounds depending on where they are placed in the symbol
- Some group of female Korean upperclassmen in CMU
About
Bored in Pittsburgh for now.
Summertime isn't as good as it used to be when I was younger, it seems. Don't you feel the same way?
This blog is probably the most random blog you could find with bits and pieces scrapped from here and there, as long as it caught my attention at the time.







