Mulan- Reflection (Korean)

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Uploaded by on Aug 19, 2009

Mulan- Reflection (Korean) reuploaded

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Film & Animation

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License:

Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 5 dislikes

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Top Comments

  • So beautiful! This song sounds wonderful in Korean. ;)

  • This song is so beautiful in Korean! It's also excellent in Polish and Swedish. =D

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All Comments (67)

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  • it will always be best inn norwegian <3

  • @dalkimi Well it's sort of like a dark leafy green Korean vegitable that my Grandma makes, it's sort of salty and a little bit spicy. I'm not sure if I spelled the word for the food right so I think that's why you have no idea what I'm talking about. Sorry for the confusion, I really wish I knew how to spell the name of that food right.

  • @roselinabonnie1997 What is "Songchu"? o_O As a native Korean I have no idea what you're talking about.

  • @insidexfishbowl

    Well, you can also say French and German share many words because both languages borrowed many words from Latin/ Greek.

  • @KpopBrandy The artist of this person singing is Sojung Lee

  • I'm a grown man and I get emotional from this and cry and I'm proud to be korean!

  • @roselinabonnie1997 Oh, there's no doubt that Japanese and Korean are both influenced by Chinese. That's why Japanese has Kanji and Korean has Hanja, even though that's rarely used presently. Sounds in languages are just sounds. It's the same with any language. My point was that Korean has more sounds than Japanese does . But as for similar words, things like the prefixes for the days of the week, certain numbers, and the tags for telling time are all very similar or even identical.

  • @insidexfishbowl Japanese and Korean actually are based off of the Hangul and Chinese speaking or written languages. Japanese sort of does sound like korean but the words can have completely different meanings like "oni" in Korean is short for little sister and "oni" in Japanese means orge. I don't know if you've ever heard of the Korean food "Songchu" but is Japanese it sounds really close to "San Juu" which is thirty in Japanese.

  • @Pony4fun continued, cause I ran out of room.] Korean has a lot of sounds that aren't in Japanese--JPN only has five vowel sounds (and some combinations, but they're mostly used in katakana words) and 13 or so consonant sounds. Korean has like 20 consonants and 10 basic vowels and then a number of complex vowels. Pronouncing Korean is much more complicated, honestly.

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