Hanja
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Hanja Lessons
- Beginners 한자
- Intermediate 한자
- Advanced 한자
Hanja By Level
with English interpretation of Korean meanings, and supplemental meanings.
- Level 8 51 baby hanja, learned in first grade.
- Level 7 102 elementary school
- Level 6 142 elementary school
- Level 5 184 elementary school
- Level 4I 313 getting harder
- Level 4II 232 getting harder
- Level 3II 357 middle/high school
- Level 3I 414 middle/high school
- Level 2 539 college, scholarly
- Level 1 1151 college, scholarly++
- Level 0 4000+ off the test
Hanja characters
FAQ
What is the point in learning Hanja?
A great deal of Korean words are made up of hanja. Learning the hanja will allow you to memorize the words faster. It's like knowing Latin root words in English. Knowing the root of a word can help you understand its meaning and remember it later. Also there are a lot of Hanja the average person is expected to know, for example man (男) and woman (女), so a door might be labeled with the hanja characters on a rest room door. This would be a good time to know hanja so you don't walk into the wrong bathroom! For real life images of hanja in use, see: Category:Hanja images
Does every Hanja character have only one sound representation?
No, some Hanja characters have more than one representation.
In some cases the pronunciation depends on where it appears in a word. For example the character 年(year) is pronounced as 연 if it appears at the beginning of the word, and 년 if it appears elsewhere. See the table below
Character | Korean representation | Notes | Examples |
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年 (year) | 연, 년 | Pronounced 연 at the beginning of a word, 년 elsewhere |
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立 (stand, establish ) | 입, 립 | Pronounced 입 at the beginning of a word, 립 elsewhere |
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女 (girl, woman) | 여, 녀 | Pronounced 여 at the beginning of a word, 녀 elsewhere |
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不 (negation) | 불, 부 | No rule, some words just use one or the other |
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