How Hangul Blocks Work: Vertical vs Horizontal Vowels
🤔 Wait — Why Are Korean Letters Stacked Like That?
Quick puzzle. Look at 가 ga and 고 go. Same consonant, different vowels — one sits side by side, the other stacks like a tiny sandwich. 🥪
한글 looks like its blocks fall together randomly, but they don’t. The rule that shapes every block is simple. Learn it once and street signs start clicking into place.
📐 The One Rule That Decides Every Hangul Block
The vowel decides where the consonant goes. That’s the whole rule. Korean vowels split into two shape families, and the family picks the layout.
| 유형 | 모음 | 배열 |
|---|---|---|
| 📏 세로 모음 (vertical line) | ㅏ ㅑ ㅓ ㅕ ㅣ | 👈 자음이 왼쪽 |
| 📏 세로 모음 (compound, same rule) | ㅐ ㅔ | 👈 자음이 왼쪽 |
| 📐 가로 모음 (horizontal line) | ㅗ ㅛ ㅜ ㅠ ㅡ | 👆 자음이 위쪽 |
Borrow a shape you already know. Picture the letter T — horizontal bar on top, vertical stem below. Horizontal vowels work the same way: consonant on top, vowel underneath. Now picture H — two long lines standing side by side. Vertical vowels follow that: consonant on the left, vowel on the right. 🎯
👀 See the Rule in Action
Watch the same consonant flip its position the moment the vowel shape changes.
→
세로 모음, 옆으로 나란히
→
가로 모음, 위아래로 쌓기
→
세로 모음 = 자음이 왼쪽
→
가로 모음 = 자음이 위쪽
Here’s your first real word: 누나 nu-na — what a boy or man calls an older sister or older female friend. Two blocks sit next to each other, but their inner layouts disagree. 누 stacks top to bottom because ㄴ rides above the horizontal vowel ㅜ. 나 spreads left to right because ㄴ stands beside the vertical vowel ㅏ. One short word, both rules in action. 👯
A little backstory: 한글 was created in 1443, and this layout principle was baked in from day one. Each block locks one syllable into one visual unit, so a single shape maps to a single sound. Palace signs, subway maps, K-pop liner notes — every 한글 block you’ll ever see obeys the vertical/horizontal split. No exceptions. 🏛️
Tiny sneak peek. Look at 와 wa. This vowel has both a horizontal piece (ㅗ) and a vertical piece (ㅏ). The ㅗ part sits on top, the ㅏ part hugs the right side, and the consonant tucks into the upper left — both rules firing in the same block. Teacher Seoul will unpack compound vowels like 와 in the next post. 🔮
✏️ Your Turn — Predict the Block Shape
Practice 1. For each pair, guess whether the block sits side by side or stacked. Then check.
- ㅁ + ㅏ → ?
- ㅁ + ㅜ → ?
- ㅅ + ㅣ → ?
- ㅅ + ㅗ → ?
정답 보기 👀
✅ 마 ma — side by side (ㅏ is vertical)
✅ 무 mu — stacked (ㅜ is horizontal)
✅ 시 si — side by side (ㅣ is vertical)
✅ 소 so — stacked (ㅗ is horizontal)
Practice 2. Sort these four syllables into the two layouts: 가, 도, 미, 부.
정답 보기 👀
👉 Side by side: 가 ga, 미 mi — vertical vowels ㅏ and ㅣ push the consonant left.
👉 Stacked: 도 do, 부 bu — horizontal vowels ㅗ and ㅜ pull the consonant up.
같은 규칙. 항상.
🎁 The One-Line Takeaway
Vowel shape tells you the layout. That’s the whole rule. Next in the 한글 Decoder series: 받침 bat-chim, the third slot that lives at the bottom of the block.
Explore the Korean Pronunciation cluster
Hub: Korean Pronunciation — Fix the Sounds That Confuse Listeners — start here for the full guide
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