one was old and one was two
Both North Korea and South Korea use Hangul. All the written characters are the same in both countries.
Babies born in Korea are automatically one year old. South Korea has a special day to celebrate their Alphabet called Hangul on October 9th
Korea is liberated from Japanese rule. Korea has beem separated into two countries, the Soviet-backed Democratic People's Republic of Korea and the pro-American Republic of Korea.
japanese
Japan was already seperated from China from the start, and Korea became seperated from mainland China by Japanese influence expanding in Korea after Sino-Japanese war in 1895.
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.
king sejong( korea)
Korea, has the 25 letter Hangul alphabet, reference this link http://dictionary.reference.com/search?r=2&q=Hangul
halmeoni is the pronounce 할머니 to write in hangul
No. Korea does have a similar martial art, but Aikido is Japanese.
- Hangul - Hanja - McCune-Reischauer
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.
No, Sushi is Japanese. However, Korea has a similar dish called Kimbap.
King Saejong changed it to hangul because he wanted people to be able to read signswithout getting confused. Also because they might have wanted to have their own language.
That makes no sense @ all! U need 2 word it differently!
Korea has two primary writing systems: Hangul and Hanja. Hangul, the native alphabet, consists of 14 basic consonants and 10 basic vowels, which can be combined to form syllables, resulting in thousands of possible combinations. Hanja, derived from Chinese characters, includes thousands of symbols, but its usage in modern Korea is limited. Overall, while Hangul is used for everyday writing, Hanja provides additional meaning and nuance in specific contexts.