Katelyn = 케이틀린
Kristy = 크리스티
halmeoni is the pronounce 할머니 to write in hangul
Yes, the Korean language uses a writing system called Hangul, which consists of characters representing consonants and vowels. Hangul characters are used to form syllabic blocks that represent sounds in the Korean language.
Both North Korea and South Korea use Hangul. All the written characters are the same in both countries.
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.
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.
Korean letters, known as Hangul, are made up of characters that resemble letters and syllables. Each character is made up of strokes and circles, arranged in blocks of typically two to four characters. Hangul characters are quite distinctive and have a unique appearance compared to other writing systems.
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
In Korean, the name Alexis is typically written as 알렉시스 (Al-ek-si-seu) in Hangul characters.
To write "Lee Min Rin" in Korean, you would write it as "이민린" using the Hangul characters.
Unfortunately, the name Katherine will not translate to text in the Korean language. The characters will not show up properly via text.
No, the Korean language does not use kanji characters in its writing system. Instead, Korean uses a unique writing system called Hangul, which was created in the 15th century.