Probably, applying for South Korean citizenship, would be the procedure.
no.
The two terms have become synonymous .
Nu (nun without the n) nin ? I am a South Korean person.
A Korean person: 韓国人 (KANKOKUJIN) The Korean laguage: 韓国語 (KANKOKUGO)
Korean
...the youngest person to go to college was a SHE and SHE was Korean and SHE was ten...it was "on" the Korean newspaper? A*HOLE.
ah, you're a Korean person
Become a naturalized Korean citizen first
Yes, it can be, used as the proper adjective for the proper noun Korea (Korean peninsula, Korean food). Korean is also a noun, for the language or as a demonym for a person from Korea.
You get it from Netmarble although everything is in Korean and you will need to know a Korean person to make an account.
Korean factories and plants became known as some of the most dangerous in the industrialized world.
Well technically, there is no such thing as a language called "South Korean". The language is just Korean but there are variations in accents and things. It is how the accent of a person in New York is different from that of person that lives in Texas.