Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 icon

Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10

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1.0.0.2Free5 years ago

Download Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 APK latest version Free for Android

Version 1.0.0.2
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Size 6.55 MB (6,869,120 bytes)
Developer Beaujoy
Category Apps, Books & Reference
Package Name com.goodfreeapps.koreannumbercounting
OS 4.1 and up

Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 APPLICATION description

Over the years Korea has developed two systems for numbering things. Korea and China have a long history, and the first number system we’ll learn was derived from Chinese characters (though the words themselves are uniquely Korean).

Koreans use 2 different sets of cardinal numbers, depending on the situation- Korean numbers and Chinese numbers. Although they usually use Arabic numerals, sometimes Chinese characters are used for prices.
Use the Korean forms for the number of items (1-99)math facts sums age: 2 children 5 bottle of beer, 27 years old.
Use the Chinese forms for dates, money, addresses, phone numbers, and numbers above 100.

This is a fun and easy system to learning skill games educational and practice of counting number and sequence for preschoolers,kids and adults of all age because you can count all the way up to a billion and beyond using it and the numbers are quite simple.

First, larger numbers are formed logically by combining smaller numbers. For example, “thirteen” is either “열셋” or “십삼”, both literally meaning “ten-three”. Sino-Korean is better at forming large numbers, because the larger numbers progress more logically. For example, “fifty” is 쉰 in native Korean, which is a stand-alone vocabulary that cannot be broken down further. However, “fifty” is 오십 in Sino-Korean, which can be broken down as “five-ten”. (Many hypothesized that this characteristic contributed to Asians being better at math.)

Second, you may have noticed addition and subtraction that the Korean broke down large numbers with four zeros between commas instead of three. The Korean did that for your convenience. Large numbers are broken down with three numbers because in English and most European languages, the unit “jumps” at every thousand. (For example, a “thousand thousand” is a “million”, and a “thousand million” is a “billion”.) But in Chinese and Korean, the unit jumps at every ten thousand. So for example, the unit 억 (=108) goes all the way up to 천억 (“thousand 억”, i.e. thousand 108) before it jumps to 조. In other words, 만억 (“ten thousand 억”) or 십천 (“ten thousand”) are incorrect in Korean.

Third, notice that in the native Korean, there are two entries for numbers 1 through 4. The first one is when the number is used as a noun. The second is when the number is used as an adjective. So, for example, if someone is exercising and simply narrating “one, two, three, four” for the sake of rhythm, s/he would say “하나, 둘, 셋, 넷” and not “한, 두, 세, 네” because the numbers are nouns in that context. But if someone is talking about “two people”, s/he would say “두 사람” instead of “둘 사람”, because “two” as an adjective modifies the noun “people” in that phrase.
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Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 screen 1 Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 screen 2 Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 screen 3 Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 screen 4 Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 screen 5 Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 screen 6 Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 screen 7 Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 screen 8 Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 screen 9 Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 screen 10 Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 screen 11 Counting number basic Korean Language sound 1-10 screen 12

Old versions

Version Size Update
⇢ 1.0.0.0 (1 variants) ↓ 5.82 MB ◴ 5 years ago
⇢ 1.0.0.2 (1 variants) ↓ 6.55 MB ◴ 5 years ago