Alphabet Hangul
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ㄱLettre hangûl kiyok
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ㄴLettre hangûl niûn
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ㄷLettre hangûl tikût
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ㄹLettre hangûl riûl
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ㅁLettre hangûl miûm
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ㅂLettre hangûl piûp
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ㅅLettre hangûl siôs
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ㅇLettre hangûl iûng
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ㅈLettre hangûl tchiûtch
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ㅊLettre hangûl tch'iûtch'
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ㅋLettre hangûl k'iûk'
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ㅌLettre hangûl t'iût'
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ㅍLettre hangûl p'iûp'
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ㅎLettre hangûl hiûh
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ㅏLettre hangûl a
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ㅓLettre hangûl o
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ㅗLettre hangûl ô
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ㅜLettre hangûl ou
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ㅡLettre hangûl û
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ㅣLettre hangûl i
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ㅑLettre hangûl ya
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ㅕLettre hangûl yo
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ㅛLettre hangûl yô
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ㅠLettre hangûl you
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ㄲLettre hangûl ssangkiyok
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ㄸLettre hangûl ssangtikût
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ㅃLettre hangûl ssangpiûp
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ㅆLettre hangûl ssangsiôs
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ㅉLettre hangûl ssangtchiûtch
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ㄳLettre hangûl kiyok-siôs
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ㄵLettre hangûl niûn-tchiûtch
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ㄶLettre hangûl niûn-hiûh
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ㄺLettre hangûl riûl-kiyok
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ㄻLettre hangûl riûl-miûm
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ㄼLettre hangûl riûl-piûp
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ㄽLettre hangûl riûl-siôs
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ㄾLettre hangûl riûl-t'iût'
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ㄿLettre hangûl riûl-p'iûp'
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ㅀLettre hangûl riûl-hiûh
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ㅄLettre hangûl piûp-siôs
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ㅐLettre hangûl è
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ㅒLettre hangûl yè
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ㅔLettre hangûl é
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ㅖLettre hangûl yé
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ㅘLettre hangûl wa
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ㅙLettre hangûl wè
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ㅚLettre hangûl eu
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ㅝLettre hangûl wo
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ㅞLettre hangûl wé
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ㅟLettre hangûl wi
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ㅢLettre hangûl ûi
Description
The Korean alphabet (Hangul) is a system of writing the Korean language. It is phonemic – each sign corresponds to its own sound. It was developed in the XV century, and nowadays it is used in North Korea and South Korea.
The characters of the Korean alphabet are called chamo. There are 51 of them in total, including 24 simple letters (10 vowels, 14 consonants), 5 amplified (double) consonants, 11 digraphs and 11 diphthongs. The letters are not written one after another, but combined into syllables, which may consist of 2,3 or 4 chamos. Words are made up of syllables. For example: the word «school» in Korean Hakka 학교. The letters ㅎ , ㅏ , ㄱ form the first syllable (hak) 학, and ㄱ , ㅛ form the second (ke) 교.
Before the Koreans had their own alphabet, they used Chinese characters (hancha). Hangul was developed by Korean scientists on the orders of King Joseon Sejong the Great in 1443. The basis could be Mongolian square letter A840–A877 . In the document «Hongmin Chonim Hare», dated 1446, King Senjong wrote that he created a new alphabet because the Korean language was different from Chinese, and Chinese characters were difficult to write for ordinary people. However, people disliked hangul. In 1504, King Yongsangun forbade writing documents and learning the new Korean alphabet. Therefore, until the twentieth century, it was mainly used by illiterate people. It became official again only in 1945.
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A
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B
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C
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D
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E
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F
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G
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H
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I
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J
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K
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L
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M
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N
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O
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P
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R
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S
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T
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U
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V
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Y
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m