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  2. Korean phonology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_phonology

    The phonology of the Korean language covers the language's distinct, meaningful sounds (19 consonants and 7 vowels in the standard Seoul dialect) and the rules governing how those sounds interact with each other. This article is a technical description of the phonetics and phonology of Korean.

  3. Help:IPA/Korean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:IPA/Korean

    The charts below show the way in which the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) represents Korean language pronunciations in Wikipedia articles. It is based on the standard dialect of South Korea and may not represent some of the sounds in the North Korean dialect or in other dialects.

  4. Obsolete and nonstandard symbols in the International ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obsolete_and_nonstandard...

    usually used in phonology to mean a spelling with no sound value. however, in Chinese and some Korean linguistics, some scholars use it for a weak glottal stop; the sound value of the first consonant of syllables started by a vowel. Ζ₯ Ζ­ 𝼉 ƈ Ζ™ Κ : hooktop p, t, ʈ, c, k, q voiceless implosives

  5. Hangul consonant and vowel tables - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hangul_consonant_and_vowel...

    Several collation sequences are used to order words (like alphabetical sorting). The North and South differ on (a) the treatment of composite jamo consonants in syllable-leading (choseong) and -trailing (jongseong) position, and (b) on the treatment of composite jamo vowels in syllable-medial (jungseong) position.

  6. Help talk:IPA/Korean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help_talk:IPA/Korean

    More is also a much lower vowel than Korean /o/, which is almost as high as English moon. kwami 16:49, 28 April 2008 (UTC) Well I made this suggestion when I looked at the vowel charts at Korean phonology. Depending on dialect, the vowel in more is mid to open-mid; in Korean, depending on length, this vowel is mid to close-mid. I'd say that's ...

  7. Initial sound rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Initial_sound_rule

    The flag hung at the founding ceremony of the Korean People's Army in 1948 reads, 'Long live General Kim Il-sung, the leader of our people!'During the North's brief use of the initial sound rule, the Sino-Korean term "ι ˜ε°Žθ€…" (leader) is spelled using the initial sound rule: μ˜λ„μž yeongdoja instead of ryeongdoja λ Ήλ„μž.

  8. File:Korean short vowel chart.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Korean_short_vowel...

    My goal is to make this more useful as a ''template'' for vowel charts. 2009-02-19T06:05:52Z Moxfyre 882x660 (2907 Bytes) removed unused defs in the XML to reduce file size 2009-02-18T21:57:03Z Moxfyre 882x660 (3165 Bytes) fixed opaque trapezoid

  9. List of Hangul jamo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hangul_jamo

    Unicode also defines a large subset of precomposed Hangul syllables (U+AC00–U+D7AF) made of two or three jamo characters for use in modern Korean (their canonical decomposition mappings are not found in the UCD, but are specified with an arithmetic algorithm only in The Unicode Standard, Chapter 3 Conformance) and are decomposable into ...