Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Superiority of Korean Language

Pyongyang, July 3 (KCNA) -- The Korean language has a long history with the formation of the Korean nation.
With the creation of Hunminjongum (the Korean alphabet) in 1444, the Korean people have used it in writing. The Korean spoken language is fluent and gentle to hear. It has also good intonation.
It, with rich pronunciation, can express correctly any difficult and complicate pronunciation.
The Korean alphabet consists of 21 vowels and 19 consonants.
The vowel not only reverberates loudly but also constitutes the core in a syllable, the smallest unit of the pronunciation.
Only when it is combined with the vowel, can the consonant form a vivid syllable and clearly reverberate in well harmony with the before and behind words.
The vowels and consonants of the Korean alphabet can express the general meanings and minute differences of the objects, phenomena and processes. Therefore, it is possible to pronounce all the foreign languages correctly.
There are more than 5,000 languages in the world, none of which can compare with the Korean written and spoken languages delicate in expression, rich in meaning and abundant in vocabulary.



Comrades, clearly the Korean language as used on all progressive, man-centered, Korean styled Socialist web pages is superior than all other mongrel languages. Only in the Korean language will you find consonants and vowels being used to form words.

3 comments:

Hansbaer said...

Do you check sometimes the stuff you write? It's weird which conclusions you draw from such a KCNA article.

Every language uses vowels and consonants - ask a linguist!

The last sentence without consonants:
Eey auae ue oe a ooa - a a iui!

And without vowels:
vr lngg ss vwl nd cnsnnts - sk lngst!

See?

Anonymous said...

Comrade Hansbaer must realize that through the magnificence of juche science the Korean language doesn't need such petty imperialist things as vowels and consonants -lol.

Iguana said...

Mongrel languages?..there's plenty of Chinese derived words in Korean. It has maybe 1/5th the number of words of English and is therefore "much simpler", not "more descriptive". When spoken, with double consonants, (i.e double gee ok) it can sound like machine gun fire....not sweet on the ear. And finally, there is no best language...although of course English is and will always be the most "useful" language on earth.