@@maxim.j22 There is a theory that when the Japanese colonial period ended and the period was briefly under US military rule, Americans selected existing English surnames or words that sounded similar to Korean surnames and used them. That's how Kim, Lee, and Park, who make up almost half of the 50 million population, came to be. Conversely, there is also a theory that it became entrenched when Koreans began borrowing and using English words. blogs.chosun.com/hyyoon/4549
I appreciate your clear pronunciation of each sound and the illustrative examples that help distinguish the differences between them. ❤
You taught the most confusing subject for me the best way!!
This video is very good. 👍 Yesterday we discussed the sounds ㅂ and ㅃ with someone.
Tysm for this and your other ones with the ㅈ/ㅉ/ㅊ,ㄷ/ㄸ/ㅌ, ㅅ/ㅆ, ㄱ/ㄲ/ㅋ and ㅐ/ㅔ
Thanks!
Khamsa habnida!
But white surname Park is 박 not 팍?
Because Bark is funny.
@@RealKoreanLanguage and why 김 is Kim not Gim? Because ㄱ is G
@@maxim.j22
There is a theory that when the Japanese colonial period ended and the period was briefly under US military rule, Americans selected existing English surnames or words that sounded similar to Korean surnames and used them. That's how Kim, Lee, and Park, who make up almost half of the 50 million population, came to be. Conversely, there is also a theory that it became entrenched when Koreans began borrowing and using English words. blogs.chosun.com/hyyoon/4549