<Tr> <Td> to be hard </Td> <Td> gud - </Td> <Td> kata - </Td> <Td> </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Td> bundle </Td> <Td> dabal </Td> <Td> taba </Td> <Td> </Td> </Tr> <P> In addition to the above, there may be a relation between the words for morning (朝, asa; 아침, achim). A historical variant in Korean may have been pronounced "asa" (see: Asadal). </P> <P> Korean particles and polite grammatical ending conjugations also share a superficial similarity with Japanese . The sentence ending particle ね (ne) has the exact same some sound and function as the Korean counterpart 네 (ne). The Japanese particle が (ga) corresponds with the particle 가 (ga) in function and sound . The honorific ending for questions in Japanese is か (ka), similar to ~ 까 (gga) in Korean . The informal noun ending in Korean 야 (ya) is similar to the dialectal informal noun ending や (ya) in Japanese (corresponding to だ in standardized Japanese). </P>

What is the difference between korean and japanese language