The Korean Hangeul writing system

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In this clip I talk about the ingenious writing system of Korean: Hangeul.

Jean Antoine
 

  • @zacharyleonard9413 says:

    I learned Hangeul on the train ride to a date with my korean girlfriend. We went to a museum and I was able to (phonetically) read a lot of the documents in the Korean section of the museum!

  • @kaon21 says:

    Hi langfocus😅

  • @christopherbonis says:

    Those clever Coreanos!

  • @veenahatolkar6297 says:

    this system in somewhat analogous to tge devnagari system

  • @keykey4216 says:

    khamsa Hamida 👍

  • @hoangkimviet8545 says:

    It is fascinating to know that this script is also used for an Indonesian language.

  • @서해수호자 says:

    Fascinating video

  • @hayeonkim7838 says:

    한국인으로서 기쁘게 느껴지는 쇼츠 영상

  • @Blackmark52 says:

    Should give a shout out to Sejong the Great, fourth king of the Joseon dynasty.
    He built the writing system specifically to help his people learn to read and write and his method was scientific in its approach.

    • @edim108 says:

      He knew one person wasn’t up to such a grand task so he gathered a committee of top scholars to come up with the perfect system for the Korean language, and they succeeded! It was so effective that literacy rates shot up like a rocket in mere years and the nobility was terrified their possitions were in danger bc up to that point only the wealthy could afford to learn the absurdly complex Chinese based writing- it was even worse than modern day Japanese as hard as it may be to believe- so not long after Sejong the Great’s death there were attempts to ban Hangeul by subsequent kings, though by that point it reached widespread popularity, as Sejong intended.

  • @TheBittuab says:

    isn’t this same as Sanskrit??

    • @Zdrange03 says:

      Not at all. Sanskrit consonants have inherent vowels, and the placement logic for other vowels is completely random. It cannot stack multiple consonants at the end of a syllable, but instead it has special glyphs for consonant clusters at the begining of a syllable. Many clusters use elements of the underlying consonants but many are unique shapes. Also, there is no logic in the shape of the various consonants (b/bh/p/ph have no communality).

    • @TheBittuab says:

      @Zdrange03  no i mean the fact that sanskrit consonants are also divided into categories (tongue, teeth, lips, throat etc)

  • @yatraine says:

    “Hangool”

  • @lance-biggums says:

    The dental consonants also happen to look a lot like the Chinese character “tian,” which also starts with a dental consinant. May be a mere coincidence but it is interesting. For sure the creator of this syllabary was familiar with Chinese writing, and probably even able to read and write it, so even if the resemblance was not intentional, perhaps it influenced him subconsciously.

  • @marolibez says:

    With hangeul it’s all fun and games until you get to learn the variations and other conventions…

  • @rbrown7969 says:

    Wow!

  • @bungalo50 says:

    Dang I knew Hangul was clever but I had no idea it even included phonetics!

  • @Zeyede_Seyum says:

    Is it an alphabet or an Abugida?

  • @Carloshache says:

    You can learn it quickly, but reading the wovels are pretty hard still as they look too similar to my eyes, I struggle with the wovels and often mix them up. I know them but it’s very hard to read quickly. It’s a quite common problem actually.

  • @Carloshache says:

    Hangul is said to be “designed from scratch” but this is not completely true. As Hangul has been shown to have influences from some other alphabets most notable the Tibetan Phaspa (square) alphabet.

    Some consonants are actually similar to their equivalent in the Greek alphabet like P (ㅍ and Π) and G (ㄱ and Γ) and B (Β and ㅂ).

  • @flatbreadjk says:

    Nobody ever talks about how Korean is rarely read the way it’s written and only focuses on how ‘ingenious’ the script is or whatever

    • @Langfocus says:

      Rarely? I don’t think so. I think what’s true is that you need to learn the allophones of certain phonemes and in what contexts they appear.

      In other words, some sounds change depending on the sounds that are around them, so you need to learn when that happens and read accordingly. But that’s no problem at all for native speakers.

  • @arsenic1146 says:

    Me who just started learning Japanese:
    WELL COULDN’T YOU DO THAT AS WELL, JAPANESE?

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