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On screen korean keyboard
On screen korean keyboard










on screen korean keyboard

Input conventions are summarized in the following tables: Consonant letters ㄱįor the jamo ㄱ ㄷ ㅂ ㄹ, the Revised Romanization conventions specify a different letter to be used when the jamo occurs initially (as choseong) from that used when it occurs at the end of a syllable (as jongseong). Hanja matching more than one hangeul will always be shown before other matching hangeul in the IME list. So, for example: Type gang Spacehang to get:Īnd press '1' (or click the first cell with the mouse) to replace 강항 with the selected hanja: When selected, the matching hangeul syllables will all be replaced. Some hanja characters will replace two or more hangeul syllables, not just a single syllable. Hanja matching more than one Hangeul syllable Sometimes a hangeul syllable may match many hanja characters, so it will be necessary to press the PgDn key several times to scroll through the list and select the wanted hanja. Press '8' to select the hanja to complete the word for 'rice', and close the IME list: The jamo for 'o' will be added, and the IME window will show hanja characters for 'do': The hangeul matching the highlighted hanja is also shown in a 'tool-tip' beneath that cell.Ĭlick the selected cell, or press '9' to select the required Hanja and close the IME list window: Moving the mouse over each cell highlights the ideograph in that cell. Press PageDown to scroll through the list. The jamo for 'u' will be added, and the IME list window will now appear, showing the first nine Hanja for the hangeul syllable 수. The jamo for 's' will appear in the output window: However, typing su PgDn 9do8 replaces the hangeul by 水搯 ( rice), while typing su PgDn PgDn PgDn 8do PgDn PgDn PgDn PgDn 9, inserts 囚徒 ( prisoner). Hanja characters are often used in Korean to distinguish between homophones, so for example, su Spacedo Spacedisplays the hangeul 수도. The mouse may also be used to scroll through the list and select a hanja character. To include Hanja ideographs in the text, make sure that the on-screen keyboard is visible, and when the entered jamo result in a list of possible matching hanja characters, scroll through the list PageDown and PageUp keys and select the appropriate character using the indicated numeral key instead of pressing the space bar to combine the jamo.

on screen korean keyboard

To ensure that the jamo are composed into the correct hangeul character, it is important to press the space bar or a punctuation key before entering more Korean text. In the same way, you may only enter those combinations of Latin script vowels (with 'y' and 'w') that are recognized by the Revised Romanization of Korean standard. So, for example, after an 's' has been entered showing the jamo ㅅ, entering a second 's' will convert the jamo to ㅆ (for 'ss'), but other consonants would be blocked since the two letters would not represent a valid jamo. Letter keys will be accepted if they can be combined with the uncomposed jamo, or blocked if not. Pressing a digit will select from the hanja displayed in the IME list (see below). Pressing any punctuation key, or Enter, will compose any pending jamo before the punctuation or new line is inserted.

on screen korean keyboard

The three jamo for 'guk' will be shown, still not yet combined in the document: The jamo for 'gu' will be seen (separately or combined):

on screen korean keyboard

The jamo for 'g' will be added to the output: Press the space bar to combine the jamo as a single hangeul character. The jamo for 'han' will now be displayed, either separately or visually combined, but not yet combined in the document: Some browsers will combine them so that they appear as a single character, but the separate jamo will not yet be combined in the document. The two jamo for 'ha' will now be displayed. The jamo for 'h' will appear in the output window: The following step-by-step example for entering hangeul shows what happens as each letter is typed:












On screen korean keyboard