Answer:
I believe it's "describing a character's speech, actions, or thoughts", because indirect characterization is when the readers are able to learn about a character through what they do and how they act. While the author or narrator, out right telling who this character is and their motives, would just be direct characterization.
Hope this makes sense :)
The answer is no it wouldn’t have
Answer:
1. Hangul Pronunciation Changes
2. Carry Over
(If the final consonant (받침) is followed by a vowel it's sound gets combined with the next vowel and it is pronounced as a part of the next syllable & not as an independent character.)
3. Nasalisation
(In Korean phonetic system , ㄴ ㅁ and ㅇ are considered as the nasal sounds. But we must remember that if "ㅇ" is in the initial position it is not a nasal consonant but a null consonant with no sound.)
4. Aspiration
(When a consonant is followed by ㅎ , it gets influenced and changes to aspirated consonant.)