@Forestofglory i got curious, because I've been struggling with many of the sounds in Korean that don't exist in English, and don't seem to receive consistent treatments in transliteration.
"Due to a number of factors, including the properties of the Korean language and alphabet, as well as social and geopolitical issues, a single settled standard did not emerge. By 1934, there were 27 extant romanization systems, and by 1997, there were over 40."
From Wikipedia https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanization_of_Korean
... Oh and there are different dialects too, aish.
The "comparison of various systems" tables are giving me psychic damage