한글
Learn the Korean Alphabet
Start with 24 letters: 14 consonants and 10 vowels. Combine them into syllable blocks and start reading Korean in days.
Start with Hangul. It gives you reading, pronunciation, and early vocabulary in one script.

How Hangul Works
Letters stack into blocks. Blocks form words.
Hangul uses a small set of shapes that stack into compact syllables. The lessons, builder, and drills keep the structure visible.
ㄱ
Initial
ㅏ
Vowel
ㅇ
Final
Beginner Roadmap
Core letters
Start with the plainest consonants and vowels first.
Simple blocks
Read CV blocks before worrying about every sound rule.
Batchim basics
Learn what changes when a consonant moves to the bottom.
Contrast practice
Train the pairs beginners confuse most often.
Core pronunciation model
Beginner view. switch depending on how much detail you want.
Three consonant families
Korean stop sounds come in plain, airy, and tight versions. Do not collapse them into one English sound.
Read by blocks
Treat each square Hangul block as one beat of sound, not as separate letters in a row.
Batchim changes sound
A final consonant often sounds different from the same letter at the start of a syllable.
Use audio over spelling
Romanization helps at first, but your ears should become the final authority.
Your Learning Path
Learn the Alphabet
Consonants
자음 Ja-eum
14 basic consonants and 5 tense consonants. Flip each card for its name, romanization, and example word.
Vowels
모음 Mo-eum
10 basic vowels and 11 compound vowels. Each card gives the sound and an example word.
Quiz
연습 Yeon-seup
Answer 10 questions. Missed characters come back more often.
Pronunciation Tools
Pronunciation Breakdown
발음 Bal-eum
Type a Korean word. Split each syllable into initial consonant, vowel, and final consonant.
Grammar 101
문법 Mun-beop
Put the verb at the end. Mark nouns with Korean particles.
Syllable Builder
조합 Jo-hap
Pick an initial consonant, a vowel, and an optional final. Build the block, then hear it.
Contrast Drills
변별 Byeon-byeol
Train the Korean sound contrasts beginners confuse.
Why Hangul Works
Created by King Sejong
King Sejong created Hangul to spread literacy. Before Hangul, Koreans wrote with Chinese characters beyond most people’s reach.
Syllable Blocks
Each character is a square block combining an initial consonant, a vowel, and an optional final consonant.
Phonetically Designed
Many letter shapes point to the position of your mouth and tongue. Shape carries sound.