Dear Michelle,
You are pretty set on this whole party thing. I think it's cute that you know any party I throw would probably be pretty lame but you're still sticking by me.
In Korean, W is like Y, it's just tacked onto the front of vowels. I didn't give you the W vowels at first because I didn't want to overwhelm you and to be honest they aren't used as much as the other vowels. W vowels are just two vowels put together, and the W sound just happens. Anyway, I will list them out for you here just in case you ever need them. I put the silent ᄋ in front of all of them just because there always has to be a consonant in front of vowels. That's just the way it is. If you can't see them, make sure you're using Chrome.
와 - wa
왜 - wae (this is also the word for "why" or "what")
외 - weh
워 - tall woh
웨 - weh (pretty much the same sound as 외)
외 - wi
의 - uei (this is the suffix often added to names, etc. to make them possessive - much like 's)
There you have it.
I have free time all of a sudden because my history class has been cancelled twice so I'm a little low on homework, so I am watching Iris. TOP is a seriously small character, but when he is there, he is basically the best. He sorts of flits in, shoots someone discreetly (or holds hapless Japanese people hostage for a while), and then flits out again, and no one's the wiser, except everyone is probably jealous of his totes classy taste in clothing.
We are talking on Facebook though, so I will end this madness now. Peace.
-Amy
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