Journal #3- 105

The Korean language has words that resemble classical Chinese that is sometimes written in Chinese characters. The words are not written phonemically and instead are written in a constant form, therefore, even if the pronunciation is correct according to the spelling, the symbol block formations may be wrong. Korean sentence structure typically follows four forms – subject and noun (I am a student), subject and verb (She runs), subject and adjective (He is a student), and subject, object and verb (I water drink). The SOV is the most common type of sentence structure in the Korean language which is very different from the English language.

To start my learning process, I will use the following resources (including a mobile app called -Learn Korean-

https://www.howtostudykorean.com/

http://mangolanguages.com/index.html

https://www.koreanclass101.com/

http://www.learnkoreanlanguage.com/learn-hangul.html

https://freshkorean.com/free-resources/

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