Korean Pronunciation — Fix the Sounds That Confuse Listeners

Korean sounds different from what you read. Here’s why.

You learn the Hangul alphabet in a weekend. Then you try to speak and Koreans look at you like you said something completely different. The gap is real — Korean has sound changes (받침 rules, double consonants, vowel blends) that happen automatically and aren’t written down. Learners who don’t tackle pronunciation early end up understandable on paper and incomprehensible in person.

This hub collects the pronunciation traps that confuse English speakers the most. Each article picks one rule, gives you minimal pairs to drill (사요 vs 싸요, etc.), and explains why your mouth has to do something different from English. No phonetic theory dumps — just what to change.

Articles in this cluster

Frequently asked

Why can’t I tell ㅅ and ㅆ apart?

English doesn’t distinguish tense and lax consonants the way Korean does. To English ears 사 (sa) and 싸 (ssa) sound nearly identical, but to Koreans they’re as different as “bad” and “pat.” The 사요 vs 싸요 article gives you the muscle-memory trick: ㅆ is pronounced with a much sharper, tighter onset.

How long does Korean pronunciation take to fix?

The Hangul-to-sound mapping (받침 rules, double consonants) clicks in 2–3 months of focused practice. Native-like intonation takes years and isn’t necessary for being understood. Aim for clear consonants first, then worry about melody.

Do I really need to learn compound vowels separately?

ㅢ, ㅚ, ㅟ — yes. They don’t decompose into the sounds of their parts in modern Seoul Korean. 의 is pronounced [ɨi] at the start, [i] in the middle, and [e] in possessives. The compound vowels article shows you which ones have shifted and which haven’t.

Is my accent going to hold me back?

No, not at the conversational level. Koreans are used to foreign learners and forgive accent generously. What they don’t forgive easily is unclear consonants (especially ㅅ/ㅆ and ㅂ/ㅍ/ㅃ) — those are the ones to invest in.

Why does Hangul block layout matter for pronunciation?

The way Hangul stacks syllables (consonant-vowel-consonant in a single block) shapes how you produce the sound. Vertical vowels (ㅏ, ㅓ, ㅣ) and horizontal vowels (ㅗ, ㅜ, ㅡ) sit differently and affect speed and intonation. The block layout article walks through the visual logic.