Hangul was created under King Sejong during the Choson Dynasty at 1393-1910.
Both North Korea and South Korea use Hangul. All the written characters are the same in both countries.
King Sejong, along with the Hall of Worthies (noteworthy scholars during the time period), created the Korean Alphabet Hangul. At that time, every developed East Asian state wrote in Chinese characters, but most commoners (who were usually famers or laborers) did not have the time to learn to read and write in such a complex writing system. As a result, Hangul (an alphabet) was created as a means of expanding literacy throughout the kingdom of Joseon (Korea).
I think you mean, "What is the Hangul alphabet. It is the Korean letter system. When you have a syllable, it stacks the first letters on top of it. the word, pantry, would look like this if the letters where romanized.pa trn y(pan) (try)
one was old and one was two
If you're saying it informally, say "Annyeong" or "안녕". But saying it formally, you'd have to say "Annyeong haseyo" or "안녕 하세ㅛ" I'm not sure on the hangul. But that's it. :)
I really hate write Hangul on keyboard because it is not easy to up and down for typing as Hangul.
Korea, has the 25 letter Hangul alphabet, reference this link http://dictionary.reference.com/search?r=2&q=Hangul
'Seo Soo Bin' is written as μμλΉ in Hangul, and 'Solbii' is written as μλΉ in Hangul.
Hangul is the native Korean alphabet, created to replace the use of Chinese characters (Hanja) in the written Korean language. Hangul consists of 24 letters representing phonetic sounds, while Hanja are Chinese characters borrowed and adapted into the Korean language for their meanings.
The name 'ahn dihyun' in Hangul simply translates to Michelle Obama.
You write dong bang shin ki in hangul like this:동방신기
Michelle in Hangul is: 미쉘. Obama is: 오바마. Hope this helps.
james matthew
oang
보스 (Boseu)
Ahgi
원더걸스를 뽑아주세요 (in Hangul) Wonder girls eul bbob a ju sai yo (pronunciation)