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  2. Korean phonology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_phonology

    Download as PDF; Printable version; ... An asterisk * after a tensed consonant is also used in ... The vowel phonemes of Korean on a vowel chart, from (Lee, 1999). ...

  3. Help:IPA/Korean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:IPA/Korean

    The charts below show the way in which the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) represents Korean language pronunciations in Wikipedia articles. It is based on the standard dialect of South Korea and may not represent some of the sounds in the North Korean dialect or in other dialects.

  4. Obsolete and nonstandard symbols in the International ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obsolete_and_nonstandard...

    The asterisk, as in [k*] for the fortis stop of Korean, is the convention the IPA uses when it has no symbol for a phone or feature. For symbols and values which were discarded by 1932, see History of the International Phonetic Alphabet.

  5. International Phonetic Alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Phonetic...

    The 1949 edition of the IPA handbook indicated that an asterisk * might be prefixed to indicate that a word was a proper name, [50] but this convention was not included in the 1999 Handbook, which notes the contrary use of the asterisk as a placeholder for a sound or feature that does not have a symbol.

  6. List of Unicode characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Unicode_characters

    As of Unicode version 16.0, there are 155,063 characters with code points, covering 168 modern and historical scripts, as well as multiple symbol sets. This article includes the 1,062 characters in the Multilingual European Character Set 2 subset, and some additional related characters.

  7. Hangul consonant and vowel tables - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hangul_consonant_and_vowel...

    The following tables of consonants and vowels (jamo) of the Korean alphabet display (in blue) the basic forms in the first row and their derivatives in the following row(s). They are divided into initials (leading consonants), vowels (middle), and finals tables (trailing consonants).

  8. List of Hangul jamo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hangul_jamo

    Unicode also defines a large subset of precomposed Hangul syllables (U+AC00–U+D7AF) made of two or three jamo characters for use in modern Korean (their canonical decomposition mappings are not found in the UCD, but are specified with an arithmetic algorithm only in The Unicode Standard, Chapter 3 Conformance) and are decomposable into ...

  9. Hangul Jamo (Unicode block) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hangul_Jamo_(Unicode_block)

    Hangul Jamo (Korean: 한글 자모, Korean pronunciation: [ˈha̠ːnɡɯɭ t͡ɕa̠mo̞]) is a Unicode block containing positional (choseong, jungseong, and jongseong) forms of the Hangul consonant and vowel clusters.