The Logic Behind Hangul
Unlike Chinese characters or even the Latin alphabet, Hangul (한글 기초) was deliberately designed in 1443 to be learnable in a single day — its creator, King Sejong, reportedly said a wise person could master it before breakfast and a fool within ten days.
Vowels and Consonants at a Glance
Hangul builds syllables from consonants and vowels arranged into blocks, rather than a single continuous string of letters. Once you can recognize the basic 14 consonants and 10 vowels, sounding out numbers, days of the week, and months becomes a matter of assembly, not memorization.
Common Beginner Mistakes
The most common trip-up is trying to read letter-by-letter left to right the way English works, instead of recognizing the syllable-block structure Hangul actually uses. Slowing down to identify each block as a unit — rather than a string of separate letters — fixes this almost immediately.
Next Steps After Learning Hangul
Once the alphabet clicks, practical vocabulary like colors gives you an easy, low-pressure way to practice reading real words instead of isolated letters — the natural next step before tackling full sentences.