Let’s go step by step to understand what this worksheet is asking you to do.
This is a Korean alphabet (Hangul) practice sheet for beginners. It focuses on consonants — specifically, the first half of them (that’s what “1/2” means).
The table has three main columns:
-
HANGUL: Shows the actual Korean letter.
-
SOUND: Tells you how to pronounce it in English letters.
-
PRACTICE: Gives you empty boxes to trace and write the letter yourself.
Each row shows one consonant. For example:
First row:
- Hangul: ㄱ
- Sound: g/k (it can sound like “g” or “k” depending on where it is in a word)
- Practice: You’ll see a gray version of ㄱ with arrows showing which direction to draw the strokes. Then there are blank boxes next to it — those are for you to copy the letter over and over until you get comfortable writing it.
Same pattern for the rest:
- Second row: ㄴ → sounds like “n”
- Third row: ㄷ → sounds like “d/t”
- Fourth row: ㄹ → sounds like “r/l” (yes, same letter can be both!)
- Fifth row: ㅁ → sounds like “m”
Your job is to:
1. Look at the black Hangul letter.
2. Say its sound out loud.
3. Trace the gray version following the arrows (start at dot #1, then #2, etc.).
4. Write the letter yourself in the blank boxes — try to make it look like the original.
You don’t need to memorize everything right now — just practice writing each letter slowly and carefully. The more you write, the easier it gets!
Final Answer:
Practice writing each Korean consonant shown in the “HANGUL” column by tracing the gray guide and then copying it into the blank boxes. Say the sound aloud as you write: ㄱ = g/k, ㄴ = n, ㄷ = d/t, ㄹ = r/l, ㅁ = m.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of korean worksheets.