That makes no sense @ all! U need 2 word it differently!
Both North Korea and South Korea use Hangul. All the written characters are the same in both countries.
Korean writing is called Hangul in South Korea and as ChosÅn'gÅ­l in North Korea and China. It is phonetic writing style and was developed by the Josen Dynasty in the mid 15th century. The Chinese character are sometimes used and known as Hanja.
North Korea uses only Hangul in their writing, as they have abolished the use of Hanja (Chinese characters) in their language system. South Korea still uses Hanja to some extent alongside Hangul.
Babies born in Korea are automatically one year old. South Korea has a special day to celebrate their Alphabet called Hangul on October 9th
Hangul is primarily used in South Korea and North Korea, where it is the official writing system for the Korean language. While Korean is spoken by the vast majority of people in these countries, there are also Korean-speaking communities around the world, including in the United States, China, and Japan. However, outside of Korea, Hangul is not widely used as a primary writing system.
king sejong( korea)
Korea, has the 25 letter Hangul alphabet, reference this link http://dictionary.reference.com/search?r=2&q=Hangul
In Korea, the name "Ella" can be written in Hangul as 엘라. Hangul is the Korean alphabet, and it phonetically represents the sounds of the name. If you need to use it in a context where it's important to convey its pronunciation accurately, you would use this Hangul spelling.
halmeoni is the pronounce 할머니 to write in hangul
Hanja, is the Korean name for Chinese characters. It refers to those Chinese characters borrowed from Chinese and incorporated into the Korean language with Korean pronunciation. Hangul, is the native alphabet of the Korean language. It was created in the mid-fifteenth century, and is now the official script of both North and South Korea.
The peninsula you are referring to is the Korean Peninsula, which is bordered by the Yellow Sea to the west. The Hangul alphabet, consisting of 24 letters, is used to write the Korean language, which is spoken in both South Korea and North Korea.
- Hangul - Hanja - McCune-Reischauer