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  2. Korean honorifics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_honorifics

    The age of each other, including the slight age difference, affects whether or not to use honorifics. Korean language speakers in South Korea and North Korea, except in very intimate situations, use different honorifics depending on whether the other person's year of birth is one year or more older, or the same year, or one year or more younger.

  3. Education in Kobe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Kobe

    The school is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. Other international schools in Kobe include: Kobe Chinese School; Kobe Korean Senior High School; Kobe Korean Elementary and Junior High School (神戸朝鮮初中級学校) West Kobe Korean Elementary School (西神戸朝鮮初級学校)

  4. Kobe Korean Senior High School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kobe_Korean_Senior_High_School

    Kobe Korean Senior High School (神戸朝鮮高級学校 Kōbe Chōsen Kōkyūgakkō; 고베조선고급학교) is a Korean heritage high school in Tarumi-ku, Kobe, Japan.= See also [ edit ]

  5. Basic Hanja for Educational Use - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_Hanja_for...

    Basic Hanja for Educational Use (Korean: 한문 교육용 기초 한자, romanized: hanmun gyoyukyong gicho Hanja) are a subset of Hanja defined in 1972 (and subsequently revised in 2000) by the South Korean Ministry of Education for educational use. Students are expected to learn 900 characters in middle school and a further 900 at high school.

  6. Korean speech levels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_speech_levels

    Each Korean speech level can be combined with honorific or non-honorific noun and verb forms. Taken together, there are 14 combinations. Some of these speech levels are disappearing from the majority of Korean speech. Hasoseo-che is now used mainly in movies or dramas set in the Joseon era and in religious speech. [1]

  7. Idu script - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idu_script

    Idu (Korean: 이두; Hanja: 吏讀; lit. 'official's reading') was a writing system developed during the Three Kingdoms period of Korea (57 BC-668 AD) to write the the Korean language using Chinese characters ("hanja"). It used Hanja to represent both native Korean words and grammatical morphemes as well as Chinese loanwords.

  8. Talk:List of English words of Korean origin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:List_of_English_words...

    While there are a few words of patently obvious borrow and common use in english (kimchee, taekwondo, hapkido, hantavirus (sort of)), and a few words which have decent citations for their use (chaebol, soju: gosu in the target article), i question the other words on this list, and would ask for better references in this list and in the target ...

  9. Gyeonggi Academy of Foreign Languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyeonggi_Academy_of...

    Myongji Foreign Language High School was a dormitory-based foreign language high school that accepted students from all over the country, mainly through its individual and unique admission tests. The students lived in the dormitory, and studied at night under the supervision of the dormitory inspectors, who were outsourced by the school.