Korean (also known as Korean) is the original language of the Korean Peninsula, with 77 million users. Korean is a sticky language, which has been marked with Chinese characters in history and incorporated into Chinese vocabulary. 1443, King Sejong created Korean letters that were highly consistent with Korean.
A vowel can form a syllable, and the syllable is located at "?" The first sound. It is just a formal consonant, a symbol that makes the font look neat and beautiful. It has no actual sound value and does not pronounce.
Consonants cannot form syllables alone, but must be combined with vowels to form syllables. When spelling, consonants can be located to the left or above vowels.
Consonant "?" No pronunciation at the beginning (just for decoration), and the ending pronunciation is used for broadcasting, which has actual sound value.
Extended data
According to the United Nations "2005 survey on the distribution, application and influence of major languages in the world". About 80 million people around the world use it. The difficulty in distinguishing homophones caused by pinyin is also the difficulty in the application of proverbs (Korean) in special purposes.
Grammatical structure is subject-object predicate (SOV) structure, which is different from Chinese subject-object predicate (SVO) (in fact, Chinese has three structures: subject-object predicate, subject-object predicate and object-object predicate. For example, "Ba" sentence can be regarded as subject-object predicate structure, and "Bei" sentence can be regarded as object-object predicate structure.
Korean, like Japanese, is similar to Altaic language family, and an important feature of Altaic language family that distinguishes it from other languages is adhesion. That is to say, Altaic language family is a sticky language type, and this type of language expresses its meaning through a large number of suffixes stuck behind the stem.
Korean and Chinese belong to two different language families, and Chinese belongs to Sino-Tibetan language family. Han family is uncertain; Chinese is a language with tones, while Korean is a language without tones. Although Chinese and Korean belong to different language families, under the strong influence of ancient Chinese on Korean in history, Korean contains a large number of Chinese loanwords (about 70%).
Baidu Encyclopedia-Korean