HANGUL WING
Hangul Wing cubistically organizes important letters in compact vowel and consonant tables according to the Hangul formation process. Like a fixed wing, it illustrates three different forms of graphic syllables with its Hangul name at the fuselage and cubistically unfolds the multi-dimensional phoneme spaces on both wings. The vowel table preceding the consonant table emphasizes its significance in a syllable. Letter names remind us their phonetic values and syllabic compositions. Opening and closing sounds are named by open and closed syllables combining them with ㅡ before and after, respectively.
VOWEL WING
A vowel pictograph (⚫) bears an iotized vowel letter by adding a dot or vertical line (ㆎ) to it and a composite vowel letter combines two graphemes (●●). Note that as a graphic syllable for /i/ reminds us the iotized vowel. The dot and vertical line in remind us the letter designs for pre-iotized and post-iotized vowels, respectively.
Pre-iotized | Basic | Primtive | |||
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ㅕ | ㅑ | ㅓ | ㅏ | ㅣ | |
ㅠ | ㅛ | ㅜ | ㅗ | ㅡ | ㆍ |
ㅖ | ㅒ | ㅔ | ㅐ | Post-iotized | |
ᆔ | ᆈ | ㅟ | ㅚ | ㅢ | ㆎ |
Speech Production | Letter Formation |
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CONSONANT WING
A consonant pictograph (ㅇ) bears a derivative letter (ㆆ) by adding a stroke on it and a composite consonant letter combines two graphemes (ㆀ). For example, ㅎ denotes the second derivative of ㅇ by the burst strength and the homogeneous digraph of a lax sound denotes its tensed sound.
ㅁ | ㅅ | ㄴ | ❘ | ㅇ | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ㅁ | ㅅ | ㄴ | ㆁ | ㅇ | |||||
ㅂ | ㅈ | ㄷ | ㄱ | ᅙ | |||||
ㅍ | ㅊ | ㅌ | ㅋ | ㅎ | |||||
ㄹ |
Speech Production | Letter Formation |
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