The Korean Alphabet is a phonetic alphabet and the characters presented within it are much more likely to be rounded or oval shaped. When attempting to discern the difference - look for oval shapes.
the Koreans and Americans and Chinese
Every distinct alphabet on the planet is different from all other alphabets.
Here are 4 types of phonetic writing systems:Pure Alphabets (consonants and vowels) such as Greek, Latin, Korean or CyrillicAbjads (consonants only) such as Hebrew and ArabicAbugidas such as Hindi and ThaiSyllabaries, such as Japanese katakana
Korean new year is same as Chinese New Year
There is so many different alphabets because there is so many different languages. Every language has a different alphabet. Even the English alphabet and the Spanish alphabet are different, even though not by much.
There is no alphabet in the Chinese language, unlike English or even Korean or Japanese (and even Korean and Japanese have no set order for their 'alphabet'), as Chinese language is simply written with different strokes put together. You might find websites that give you the way English alphabets might be written in Chinese, phonetic-wise, but that is only how we would pronounce English alphabets in Chinese phonetically, and not the Chinese alphabet. :)
Korean alphabets are called Hangul. Korean people use their own alphabets call Hangul alphabets. These alphabets was introduced under the king Sejong during Dynasty from 1393-1910.
Japanese writing consists of three different alphabets: Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji. Hiragana and Katakana are phonetic alphabets with characters representing sounds, while Kanji consists of characters borrowed from Chinese writing, each representing a word or concept.
Japanese dragon eyes squint more than Korean dragons your welcome;)
the Koreans and Americans and Chinese
Some examples of languages that do not use alphabets include Chinese, Japanese, and Korean, which use characters or symbols instead of letters. Additionally, languages like Arabic and Hebrew use scripts with characters representing sounds rather than individual letters.
korean
Yes they can. In the Korean group miss A, there are two Chinese people. In another Korean group, f(x) there is two Chinese people (one is currently not there). So you can be a Korean singer if you're Chinese.
Korean were derived from Chinese
It is because they are same root. Korea was settled by Chinese; as a part of China, many Korean cultures and language are from mainland China and Korean are no different than Chinese genetically.
Chinese does not have an alphabet like English. Chinese characters are instead represented by characters with specific meanings and pronunciations. These characters are combined to form words. Each character has its own pronunciation that is independent of an alphabet system.
Every distinct alphabet on the planet is different from all other alphabets.