In this lesson I will go through the Korean alphabet and the phonology.
Below are the Hanguel letters, followed by their romanisation and IPA pronunciation
(According to Wikipedia)Consonant phonemes:
ᄇ - b - /p~b/
ᄈ - pp - /p/ (tense)
ᄑ - p - /p/ (aspirated)
ᄆ - m - /m/
ᄃ - d - /t~d/
ᄄ - tt - /t/ (tense)
ᄐ - t - /t/ (aspirated)
ᄂ - n - /n/
ᄌ - j -
should be Voiceless~voiced alveolo-palatal affricate, but it's not letting me copy and paste the symbol
ᄍ - jj - Same as above, but tense.
ᄎ - ch - Aspirated ᄌ.
ᄀ - g - /k~g/
ᄁ - kk - /k͈/ (tense)
ᄏ - k - /kʰʰ/ (aspirated)
ᄉ - s - /s/
ᄊ - ss - /s/ (tense)
ᄅ - r/l - /l~ɾɾ /(l~Spanish r)
ᄒ - h - /h~ɦ/(voiced/voiceless equivalents)
ᄋ- ng - /ŋ/ (Syllable final)
not pronounced (syllable initial)
Syllable initially, ᄋ is used as a null character and the syllable starts with the vowel attached to it.
Vowel phonemes (with null character):
아 - a - /a/
애 - ae - /ɛ/
야 - ya - /ja/
얘 - yae - /jɛ/
어 - eo - /ʌ/
에 - e - /e/
여 - yeo - /jʌ/
예 - ye - /je/
오 - o - /o/
와 - wa - /wa/
왜 - wae - /wɛ/
외 - oe - /ø/
요 - yo - /jo/
우 - u - /u/
워 - wo - /wʌ/
웨 - we - /we/
위 - wi - /ɥi/
유 - yu - /ju/
으 - eu - /ɯ/
의 - ui - /ɰi/
이 - i - /i/
Now that's done, lets see how the system works:
All phonemes in a syllable are squashed to fit in a box, with the initial consonant at the top, followed by a vowel to the right or below of it, and then another consonant below that.
Therefore the 'han' in hangeul is a combination of ᄒ, ᅡ and ᄂ, so is written
한So, the second syllable 'geul' is written as
글.
Note that a syllable doesn't have to contain this amount of phonemes, there are a few consonant clusters that are allowed at the end of syllables, which are:
ㄳㄵㄶㄺㄻㄼㄽㄾㄿㅀ and ㅄA syllable can also be CV or just V, e.g. the verb 'to do' is written 하다 ('hada')
Fell free to ask me questions, I will post some exercises later!