형 (hyung)
i see the h (ㅎ) sound and the yeo (ㅕ) sound, but where are the n and g sounds? shouldn't there be a ㄴ and a ㄱ somewhere in there for ng sound? Is the romanization just confusing me? Thank you!
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- rosierosieMarch 2019
Donner des réponses.
nmesomtoChukwuMarch 2019 The 'ng' sound which is the same 'ng' sound in English gerunds ('ing') is written as 'ㅇ'. Therefore instead of 'ㄴㄱ' you have 'ㅇ'. |
nkmaMay 2019 A syllable in Korean language has 2 or 3 phonemes. 1st and 3rd phoneme is a consonant. 2nd one is a vowel. As a 3rd phoneme, "-n" could be correspond to "ㄴ", "-g" to "ㄱ" and "-ng" to "ㅇ". Not all romanized alphabets have a one-to-one correspondence with Hangul character. |