There are quite a few online courses / tutorials out there now, but unfrotunately many of them still use the obsolete McCune-Reischauer system for notation (mainly because that's the system that's been most widely used). Oh well, whatever -- the best way to nail down the pronunciation is to do a lot of listening and speaking with native speakers, anyway.
Sogang and Yonsei Universities have pretty strong Korean-for-forgeigners programs in general --> here are Sogang's web lessons:
I have one grudge when I am learning Korean. Why does the modern Korean writing use western-style punctuation system. It doesn't look naturally Asian to me. That is my one dilemma.
BTW, I'm white.
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Anonymous2006-06-28 19:05
48>
This is the most intelligent comment I have ever read today.(*_*)
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Anonymous2006-06-28 19:24
>>48
Well, it isn't naturally Asian. Maybe it's because you're used to it with Greek characters instead of Asian characters.
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Anonymous2006-06-29 11:21
I'll check this thread periodically, if anyone has questions or wants to know how to read/say something.