The Overhauled Romanization of Korean (국어의 로마자 표기법; 國語의 로마字 表記法; gugeoui romaja pyogibeop. operation; lit. "Roman-letter documentation of the national language") is the official Korean language romanization framework in South Korea. It was created by the National Foundation of the Korean Language from 1995 and was discharged to general society on 7 July 2000 by South Korea's Service of Culture and The travel industry in Announcement No. 2000-8
The new framework rectified issues in the McCune–Reischauer framework, for example, wonders where various consonants and vowels got indistinct without extraordinary images. To be explicit, under the McCune–Reischauer framework, Korean consonants "ㄱ(g), ㄷ(d), ㅂ(b) and ㅈ(j)" and "ㅋ(k'), ㅌ(t'), ㅍ(p') and ㅊ(ch')" became unclear when the punctuation was expelled. Moreover, Korean vowels "어(ŏ)" and "오(o)" and "으(ŭ)" and "우(u)" became indistinct when the breve was evacuated. Particularly in web use where exclusion of punctuations and breves is normal, this caused numerous Koreans just as outsiders disarray. Henceforth, the correction of the Romanization of Korean was made with the conviction that if the old framework was left unrevised, it would keep on confounding individuals, the two Koreans and outsiders.