If you can’t Google and evaluate things like “resources to learn Japanese” etc in Korean, then no. It doesn’t matter. Learning Hiragana takes a weekend or a week at most.
You will encounter romanized Japanese a lot more than it in hangeul. And when you type on a computer it will probably be with romanized letters.
I’ve studied some Korean both through Japanese and English. It can be helpful through Japanese simply because grammar and the shared Chinese-based vocab are intertwined. So I assume that will be similar in your case. Sometimes getting a different perspective through English helps though. So I probably would recommend using some Korean resources if you can find them.
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If you can’t Google and evaluate things like “resources to learn Japanese” etc in Korean, then no. It doesn’t matter. Learning Hiragana takes a weekend or a week at most.
You will encounter romanized Japanese a lot more than it in hangeul. And when you type on a computer it will probably be with romanized letters.
I’ve studied some Korean both through Japanese and English. It can be helpful through Japanese simply because grammar and the shared Chinese-based vocab are intertwined. So I assume that will be similar in your case. Sometimes getting a different perspective through English helps though. So I probably would recommend using some Korean resources if you can find them.