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  1. Mar 9, 2022 · K + O + R + E + A = Korea. However, in the Korean language, you will have to place them into specific blocks, which together then form the word. So, in the case of the same word, but in Korean, it would look like this: ㅎ + ㅏ + ㄴ ㄱ + ㅜ + ㄱ = 한국. This is an excellent example of forming the block using both a vertical vowel and a ...

  2. White, Black, and Korean American Identities 53 by "nonwhites" (see Gaudio, Trechter, this issue), because whiteness is constructed not only through white language, but also through imaginings of white language and its relationship with other forms of racialized lan-guage. In emphasizing the imagined aspect of language, I seek to call

  3. Racial and ethnic groups are designated by proper nouns and are capitalized. Therefore, use “Black” and “White” instead of “black” and “white” (do not use colors to refer to other human groups; doing so is considered pejorative). Likewise, capitalize terms such as “Native American,” “Hispanic,” and so on.

  4. Take the name of the writing system itself, hangul: These are the symbols that comprise the word in Korean: ㅎ, ㅏ, ㄴ, ㄱ, ㅡ, ㄹ. However, you can't write ㅎㅏㄴㄱㅡㄹ all in a row and call it a day. That doesn't work at all. Instead, Korean symbols within words are grouped into "syllable blocks".

  5. Jun 21, 2019 · When it’s a horizontal verb like ㅗ, the consonant is written above the vowel as in 노. Here are a few of the ways Korean syllable blocks may look (C = Consonant, V = Vowel, F = Final Consonant (s)): In Korean, a word may be made up of just one of these blocks like 저 ( cheo, “I”) or several as in 음악가 ( eumagga, “musician”).

  6. The Korean writing system, Hangul, is an “alphabetic syllabary” which employs many of the good and few of the bad features of an alphabet, a syllabary, and a logography. An alphabet can represent any word in the language, one phoneme at a time, but the phoneme-grapheme correspondence may be imperfect, and a single word may require a long ...

  7. Oct 15, 2020 · The three East-Asian scripts—Chinese (characters and Pinyin), Japanese (multi-scripts), and Korean (alphabetic Hangul)—are discussed. Under each script, a brief historical account of the given writing system, the key features of the script, and the strengths and weaknesses as a script are described. The commonalities and differences among ...

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