Reddit reviews The Sounds of Korean: A Pronunciation Guide
We found 9 Reddit comments about The Sounds of Korean: A Pronunciation Guide. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.
We found 9 Reddit comments about The Sounds of Korean: A Pronunciation Guide. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.
ALC has published a number of quality resources for Japanese speakers learning Korean. In particular they had a number of parallel texts with Korean audio, some designed for learners, others taken from actual KBS broadcasts. Their website makes it seem like they no longer support Korean or Chinese but it looks like you can still order text books, back issues of 韓国語ジャーナル, and other materials.
From the Korean side, Naver and Daum both offer a free online Japanese-Korean dictionaries.
Although learning vocabulary and grammar through Japanese is a good idea, you're better off learning pronunciation through English. Stay away from katakana. The most thorough resource is Sounds of Korean: A Pronunciation Guide.
Since Korean and Japanese share a ton of Sino loan words, it helps to become familiar with some of the common sound shifts. Just like English speakers get free words when learning Romance languages (Eng: -tion → Fra: -tion, Spa: -cion, Ita: -zione), it's easier to tap into your free Korean words if you learn the rules. Some of the patterns are more consistent than others but every bit helps. A couple off the top of my head:
I recently bought this book, The Sounds of Korean: A Pronunciation Guide, and so far it is excellent. It is very detailed and has tons of practice exercises.
You can check out a preview of the book here at Google Books:
http://books.google.com/books?id=vTuB12nR3qEC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false
and you can download the exercises in mp3 format here:
http://www.uhpress.hawaii.edu/p-3043-9780824826017.aspx
I don't have my copy of it with me to check the table of contents, but I think Sounds of Korean has a chapter at the end about sentence level intonation that could be what you're looking for.
it is this and it is a must have for Korean learners for sure. Hope you can find something similar!
> Other examples, blood and rain sound the same in Korean yet they are spelt@ differently.
So, 피 and 비. They are two distinctive sounds. It's just that your ears are not tuned to Korean language yet and can't really distinguish them now.
I think it would be really beneficial if you pick up a book like Sounds of Korean and spend several weeks solely dedicated to learning Korean phonology. It will help out immensely with your ability to recognize and produce the sounds in Korean language.
This book helped me a lot. It explains pronunciation of all the letters and explains the difference based on their position in a syllable and in a word. It comes with a ton of audio material and exercises.
If you want to learn it on your own, I highly recommend the book Sounds of Korean: A Pronunciation Guide
It is 300 pages worth of nothing else but pronunciation rules, tips for improving accent, etc. Around half of that is audio listening exercises.
Here are some links for the product in the above comment for different countries:
Link: this
|Country|Link|
|:-----------|:------------|
|UK|amazon.co.uk|
|Spain|amazon.es|
|France|amazon.fr|
|Germany|amazon.de|
|Japan|amazon.co.jp|
|Canada|amazon.ca|
|Italy|amazon.it|
|China|amazon.cn|
This bot is currently in testing so let me know what you think by voting (or commenting).
Not really. ㅓ doesn't sound like the 'u' in up, and 아 bears only a small resemblance to the 'a' in after.
Just memorize the way actual Korean words sound, and stop trying to compare the sounds to English sounds. These are not English sounds.
Here's a good book:
http://www.amazon.com/Sounds-Korean-A-Pronunciation-Guide/dp/0824826019/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1376053427&sr=8-1&keywords=korean+pronunciation