Questions

Is Japanese kanji same as Korean?

Is Japanese kanji same as Korean?

The characters used in Korean (hanja) and Japan (kanji) are distinct from those used in China in many respects. First, they look similar (but might not be the same) to traditional Chinese characters than simplified Chinese characters. It is written as “劍” and read as “검 [geom]” in Korean.

Is Korean a contextual language?

In a nutshell, Korean (like some other Asian languages) is a high-context language. It relies more on contexts, shared assumptions, and nonverbal signs than on the WORDS themselves. English native speakers tend to say exactly what they mean, word by word.

Is Japanese a contextual language?

The Japanese language is highly contextual. It’s hard to know how to say something in Japanese unless you know the details of the social context. That reflects a long-standing Japanese concern with order, hierarchy, and consensus. This turned out to be a big problem because there is no simple” hello” in Japanese.

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Is it possible to learn Chinese characters in Korean without knowing them?

Korean also uses Chinese characters (called “hanja” in Korea), but you don’t have to know them to read books or street signs. If you want to learn them you can, and it will help, but it’s not necessary the way it is with Japanese. Unfortunately, everything else about Korean is probably going to be significantly harder than Japanese. For example:

Can you distinguish between Chinese Japanese and Korean writing?

However, the 3 scripts used for these 3 different languages are quite different. If you learn to notice special character shapes and text formatting, you should be able to distinguish between Chinese, Japanese, and Korean writing, even if you can’t read any of them.

What is the difference between Korean and Japanese characters?

While Japanese has curvy shapes, it doesn’t have complete circles within the characters as Korean does. Korean has an alphabet, just like the English language. However, the written language combines 2 or 3 letters into a single character representing the syllable of a word.

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Why does the Japanese language contain Chinese characters?

Let me first give you a brief history of the Japanese language and how it evolved to contain Chinese Characters. The Japanese language originally only made use of hiragana (ひらがな, the “original” Japanese words that are not Chinese) but after trading started between China and Japan, Chinese words were “brought over” into Japan.