Today I begin my first real push to discern order from the written chaos around me. Up until now I hadn't thought it'd bothered me that much, but just a few symbols easily digested, and suddenly the power of literacy sets it claws in me.
There appear to be only 34 characters in Hangul, and the phonetic construction is highly regular...none of this ghoti business. Heck, I'll have it down in no time.
To suddenly be able to order food by sound, not pictures (For some extremely frustrating reason Koreans don't always seem to understand when you point to something on the menu, even if it's a picture. Sometimes a circling motion helps, but not always. I just don't get what can be more clear than actually touching what you want with the tip of your primary digit.), to be able to use the bus system, to hike and know where you're going and where you've been. The very universe unfolds.
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Per the Learn Korean Language Web site:
Characters will be stacked into squares to form each syllable. For example, ㅎ, ㅏ, and ㄴ are three separate characters. But, as they would form one syllable, they would be written 한 instead of ㅎㅏㄴ.
ㅎ+ㅏ+ㄴ = 한
want another example?
ㄱ+ㅡ+ㄹ = 글
We then combine syllables to form words, just as we do in English.
한 + 글 = 한글
Recognize that word? That's right! It's Hangul . It consists of han (한) and gul (글). Two syllables. Six characters.
It was so easy for Neo. But I guess he only uploaded Kung-Fu it probably wasn't language dependent.
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