Abdul Rehman's profile

Mixing of languages

The Korean language can be written with a mix of Chinese Ideograms ("Hanja") as well as the native Korean alphabet called "Hangul" or "Hangul" by itself, just as in a more restricted way that Indo-European languages often use numbers in Arabic symbols, and at other times write numbers using their own alphabets or one of the two varieties.
There is a continuous debate regarding the genetic distinction between Korean and Korean language, as some experts think that Korean is part of the Altaic family of languages that first came into existence in the northern part of Asia and encompasses those of Turkic, Mongol, Hungarian, Finnish and Tungusic (Manchu) languages.
Because of the Korean War giving rise to North and South distinctions and a language that has evolved has seen variations in its pronunciation, its verbs and vocabulary. The case in South Korea, the language is usually referred to as Hangungmal and the language in North Korea it is most often referred to as Chosonmal.
A flashback to the time between 1910 and 1945 will transport us across the entire Korean peninsula which was under Japanese rule. A lot of Japanese words and phrases were introduced to Korea in this time. Despite numerous unsuccessful attempts to ban using Korean as a Korean dialect, the daring actions of Korean into English who belonged to Korea's Korean Language Society, resulted in the survival and success of the Korean language.
This is why Korean was found to have Korean language showed significant similarity in terms of vocabulary and grammatical structures , leading to the idea that Korean could be connected with Japanese at least in some manner. But other linguists claim that the similarities aren't because of any genetic link instead, it is because of the heavy borrowing, particularly from Korean to Western Old Japanese.
Mixing of languages
Published:

Mixing of languages

Published:

Creative Fields