the national anthem is A guk ka 애국가
that means to love our country
it does sound Korean
No, it's a South-Korean company based in Seoul, Korea. I'm Korean so i know. It doesnt sound Japanese either.
four persons did
oooooo ooooooo heyyy ha ho heeeeee, hi ha homs oohwhee ite.
The Singapore's national anthem should be something familiar to all Singaporeans. Named "Majulah Singapura", it is known as the identity of the nation. Majulah Singapura Mari kita rakyat SingapuraSama-sama menuju bahagiaCita-cita kita yang muliaBerjaya Singapura Marilah kita bersatuDengan semangat yang baruSemua kita berseruMajulah SingapuraMajulah Singapura The national anthem was written by Encik Zubir Said around 1956-1957. The whole anthem was on the basis of 2 words, "Majulah Singapura", which translates to mean "Onward Singapore". It was selected to be the national anthem by the Singapore self-government in 1959, and formally recognized as the national anthem in 1965, when Singapore attained independance. The original anthem was composed in the key of G-major, but was changed into F-major in 2001 as it seemed to make it sound grander and more inspiring. Every morning, all the students in Singapore will have a sing the national anthem and recite the Pledge as a start of the day.
I have that same camera and it doesnt have sound you would think it does but it doesnt. Sorry.
The sound is like "She"
에바 Romanization: Eba. In Korean there isnt a 'v' sound.
In the Korean language, there is no distinct F sound. When words from other languages with the F sound are used in Korean, they are often pronounced with a sound that is similar to either a P sound or a combination of P and H sound.
To write "Lara" in Korean, you can use the characters "λΌλΌ." The first character "γΉ" represents the "r" sound, and the second character "γ " represents the "a" sound. Simply put together, they spell out "Lara" in Korean.
neeeeyyyyyy, same as "yes" in hangul (korean)
Punch In Korean is Kun-Yuk To say it, just say Kun -Yuck (with a short U sound)
doesnt sayyy