Middle Korean — noun Korean in the 10th century to 16th century, or from the era of Goryeo to the middle of Joseon, based on the dialect of Kaesong because the new Goryeo dynasty moved its capital city to northern area of Korean peninsula … Wiktionary
Middle Korean (10th-16th cent.) — ISO 639 3 Code : okm ISO 639 2/B Code : ISO 639 2/T Code : ISO 639 1 Code : Scope : Individual Language Type : Historical … Names of Languages ISO 639-3
Korean language — This article is about the spoken Korean language. For details of the native Korean writing system, see Hangul. Korean 한국어, 조선말 Hangugeo, Chosŏnmal … Wikipedia
Korean language — Official language of North Korea and South Korea, spoken by more than 75 million people, including substantial communities of ethnic Koreans living elsewhere. Korean is not closely related to any other language, though a distant genetic kinship… … Universalium
Korean language and computers — This article addresses how computers are used to read and write Korean, using Hangul.Character encodingsIn , a method known as ISO 2022 KR for a 7 bit encoding of Korean characters in email was described. Where 8 bits are allowed, the EUC KR… … Wikipedia
Korean dialects — Various words for dragonfly (Standard Korean 잠자리) … Wikipedia
Korean phonology — This article is a technical description of the phonetics and phonology of Korean.Korean has many allophones, so it is important here to distinguish morphophonemics (written in pipes IPA|| |) from corresponding phonemes (written in slashes IPA|/… … Wikipedia
Korean Air — 대한항공 大韓航空 Daehan Hanggong IATA KE ICAO KAL Callsign … Wikipedia
Korean cuisine — Hanjeongsik, a full course Korean meal with a varied array of banchan (side dishes)[1] Korean name … Wikipedia
Korean literature — is the body of literature produced in Korea or by Korean writers. For much of its 3,000 years of literature history, it was written both in Hanja and in Korean, first using the transcription systems idu and gugyeol, and finally using the Korean… … Wikipedia