Mandarin-Korean Word Lists for Chinese

By Taebum Kim

Release : 2016-05-04

Genre : Korean Language Studies, Books, Reference, Foreign Languages, Communications & Media, Travel & Adventure, Travel in Asia, Dictionaries & Thesauruses, Young Adult, Computers & Tech for Young Adults, Jobs & Careers for Young Adults, Business & Personal Finance, Marketing & Sales, Study Aids, Words & Language, Management & Leadership, Careers, Professional & Technical, Education, Language Arts & Disciplines

Kind : ebook

(0 ratings)
[Highlights]

Study Korean anytime and anywhere with smartphone, tablet, etc
Focused on the pronunciation of common Chinese characters, which comprise approximately 70% of Chinese characters in China and Korea.
Entries are grouped by first syllables with similar pronunciation for effective vocabulary learning taking into consideration of unique Chinese character pronunciation 
Main entries are in Pinyin (Romanized standard Chinese pronunciation) for easy vocabulary search with Romanized Korean pronunciation

[Who needs this book]

Students, businessmen, travelers who want to increase Korean vocabulary in short term
Mandarin speakers who want to increase Korean vocabulary themselves easily
Anyone who want to give this book as a gift to their children, grandchildren or others

This book lists approximately 3,000 core Korean words for school, exam, business and travel with Mandarin equivalents including Romanized pronunciation.  Main entries are in Pinyin (Romanized standard Chinese pronunciation) alphabetically with Chinese characters (both simplified and traditional if applicable). In the next line, the entry’s Romanized Korean equivalents, Hangul (Korean alphabet), and Korean Hanja (漢字).
Entries are grouped by first syllables with similar pronunciation for effective vocabulary learning taking into consideration of unique Chinese character pronunciation  First entry Chinese character is written in red and entries are also grouped by same Chinese characters. 
Common Chinese character words are written in black, while certain words with same meaning but with reverse syllable order are written in red. Some syllables with partially different fonts are also written in red.
In case of part of speech, most of Korean verbs are in the form of ‘noun+‘하다(hada)’ with some exceptions.

[Sample]
<bao 빠오>
bāo hán  包含
 po ham  포함(包含); po ham ha da  포함(包含)하다
bāo wéi  包围 (包圍)
 po wi  포위(包圍); po wi ha da  포위(包圍)하다
bì zhàng  壁障
 jang byeok  장벽(障壁)

Mandarin-Korean Word Lists for Chinese

By Taebum Kim

Release : 2016-05-04

Genre : Korean Language Studies, Books, Reference, Foreign Languages, Communications & Media, Travel & Adventure, Travel in Asia, Dictionaries & Thesauruses, Young Adult, Computers & Tech for Young Adults, Jobs & Careers for Young Adults, Business & Personal Finance, Marketing & Sales, Study Aids, Words & Language, Management & Leadership, Careers, Professional & Technical, Education, Language Arts & Disciplines

Kind : ebook

(0 ratings)
[Highlights]

Study Korean anytime and anywhere with smartphone, tablet, etc
Focused on the pronunciation of common Chinese characters, which comprise approximately 70% of Chinese characters in China and Korea.
Entries are grouped by first syllables with similar pronunciation for effective vocabulary learning taking into consideration of unique Chinese character pronunciation 
Main entries are in Pinyin (Romanized standard Chinese pronunciation) for easy vocabulary search with Romanized Korean pronunciation

[Who needs this book]

Students, businessmen, travelers who want to increase Korean vocabulary in short term
Mandarin speakers who want to increase Korean vocabulary themselves easily
Anyone who want to give this book as a gift to their children, grandchildren or others

This book lists approximately 3,000 core Korean words for school, exam, business and travel with Mandarin equivalents including Romanized pronunciation.  Main entries are in Pinyin (Romanized standard Chinese pronunciation) alphabetically with Chinese characters (both simplified and traditional if applicable). In the next line, the entry’s Romanized Korean equivalents, Hangul (Korean alphabet), and Korean Hanja (漢字).
Entries are grouped by first syllables with similar pronunciation for effective vocabulary learning taking into consideration of unique Chinese character pronunciation  First entry Chinese character is written in red and entries are also grouped by same Chinese characters. 
Common Chinese character words are written in black, while certain words with same meaning but with reverse syllable order are written in red. Some syllables with partially different fonts are also written in red.
In case of part of speech, most of Korean verbs are in the form of ‘noun+‘하다(hada)’ with some exceptions.

[Sample]
<bao 빠오>
bāo hán  包含
 po ham  포함(包含); po ham ha da  포함(包含)하다
bāo wéi  包围 (包圍)
 po wi  포위(包圍); po wi ha da  포위(包圍)하다
bì zhàng  壁障
 jang byeok  장벽(障壁)

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