The full name for Korea is Dae Han Min Guk - 대하민국
d-ㄷ ae- h-ㅎ a-ㅏ n-ㄴ m-ㅁ i-ㅣ n-ㄴ g-ㄱ u (/oo/)-ㅜ k-ㄱ
A bit confusing I know as the ㄱ can be /r/r or /k/ Of course most just use Han Guk - 한국 To truly pronounce it correctly don't you can't voice that /k/ in Guk, but just sort of stop the breath from coming out of your mouth so you cut it off a bit. For a full list of romantization of Korean go:
http://www.koreainsider.com/korean-alphabet.html
대한민국 It is pronounced daehanmingug
The majority of Korean people live in urban areas, with the largest concentration in and around the capital city of Seoul. Other large cities such as Busan, Incheon, and Daegu also have significant populations. Rural areas have smaller populations compared to urban centers.
Korean people are people who originate in Korea. They look like Chinese.
Korean people are people who originate in Korea. They look like Chinese.
Korean
리엄 pronounced "Rhee-um" is the closest way to spell Liam in Korea.
They are Korean people from South Korea.
The people of South Korea identify themselves as Koreans or ROK (Republic of Korea). In common-parlance they will use the term "South Korean", but only to clarify that they are not from North Korea, not as a general identifier. The Korean term for "Korean person" is Hangkuk-een (한국인).
The name Mark is just the same thing in Korean. The Korean language doesn't really translate English names into Korean. This is how you write it: 마크 pronounced Ma-ke
난 남한에서 왔어요 pronounced "nan namhan-eseo wass-eoyo"
Korea in Korean is "hanguk"
Korea has 2 counting systems: pure Korean and borrower system from Chinese. Pure Korean zero is "young" (just like it's pronounced in English). Zero in borrower Chinese system is "gong" (pronounced like 'pwnd' with the ng at the end ) .