-
Hanja (Korean: 한자;
Hanja: 漢字,
Korean pronunciation: [ha(ː)ntɕ͈a]),
alternatively known as Hancha, are
Chinese characters (Chinese: 漢字; pinyin: hànzì) used...
-
Basic Hanja for
educational use (Korean: 한문 교육용 기초 한자, romanized: hanmun
gyoyukyong gicho Hanja) are a
subset of
Hanja defined in 1972 (and subsequently...
- (Korean: 국한문혼용;
Hanja: 國漢文混用) is a form of
writing the
Korean language that uses a
mixture of the
Korean alphabet or
hangul (한글) and
hanja (漢字, 한자), the...
- men (Korean: 비섹스;
Hanja: 非****; RR: bisekseu), child-rearing (Korean: 비출산;
Hanja: 非出産; RR: bichulsan),
dating men (Korean: 비연애;
Hanja: 非戀愛; RR: biyeonae)...
- also
alternatively translated as
Omniscient Reader (Korean: 전지적 독자 시점;
Hanja: 全知的讀者時點; RR: Jeonjijeog
Dogja Sijeom), is a
South Korean web-novel written...
- Sino-Korean
vocabulary or
Hanja-eo (Korean: 한자어;
Hanja: 漢字語)
refers to
Korean words of
Chinese origin. Sino-Korean
vocabulary includes words borrowed directly...
-
given names consist of two Sino-Korean
morphemes each
written with one
hanja.
There are also
names with more than two syllables,
often from
native Korean...
-
Korean terms for
names exist. For full names,
seongmyeong (Korean: 성명;
Hanja: 姓名),
seongham (성함; 姓銜), or
ireum (이름) are
commonly used. When a Korean...
-
Hanja was
inadequate to
write Korean and that
caused its very
restricted use;
Hangul was
designed to
either aid in
reading Hanja or to
replace Hanja entirely...
- ****anese, Korean, and Vietnamese,
Chinese characters are
known as kanji,
hanja, and chữ Hán respectively. Each of
these countries used
existing characters...