Let's go sis:
Manhwa: Korean manga
Manga: the typical Japanese manha
Manhua: Chinese manga
Bara: Romance between buffed guys
One-shoot: A one chapter only story
Canon: It's when something really happened and it's confirmed my the authors
Shounen ai: usually Boys love but no sex (there's a deeper meaning, but here it mean that)
Shounen: A boys gender in anime, usually with sports, action, and etc.
Shoujo: A girls gender in anime, usually romance and slice of life.
Doujinshi: They're a non canon world created by fans about a story.
And webtoon it's a way of reading, instead of pages you scroll down the screen
Hope I helped you, and If Im wrong, anybody's welcomed to fix it
Manhwa: korean webtoon/comic (mostly used for webtoons)
Manga: japanese webtoon/comic (mostly used for comics)
Manhua: Chinese webtoon/comic (mostly used for webtoond)
Bara: Gay manga written for gay man by gay man, basically yaoi but with buff, often hairy men
One-shot: A story which is just one chapter
Canon: Official. Confirmed by the creators. Ex. Ymir and Historia are a canon couple in Attack on Titan
Shounen ai: Japanese for boy's love. Used for BL sotries that don't have any sex scenes.
Shounen: Literally translates to boy. Manga/anime whose target audience is young boys, such as My Hero Academia, One Piece, ect.
Shoujo: Manga/anime whose target audience is girls. Pretty much every romance anime out there is shoujo.
Doujinshi: Amateur manga (often a oneshot) which more often than not parodies another manga/anime. Basically fanfiction in manga form, often associated with hentai.
Hope that helps!
manhwa - korean comic
manga - japanese comic
manhua - chinese comic
bara - i guess a genre of BL with muscly men, unlike yaoi, it's target audience is gay men
one shot - a comic with one chapter completed
canon - something that happens in the actual anime/manga (e.g. the ship sakura x sasuke is cannon - naruto - but naruto x sasuke is not cannon)
shounen ai - BL without any sex or anything else graphic
shoujo - target audience is young/teen girls, but people also refer to it as highschool straight romance
doujinshi - also referred to as DJ, a fan-made comic. like if there is a ship that isn't cannon, they create fan made comics where the characters are dating.
Manhwa : comics in korean (comics from korea)
Manhua : comics in chinese
Manga : comics in japanese
Bara : not sure but basically its gay men smut (?)
One-shot : only has one chapter
Canon : legit? Real? Confirmed?
Shounen ai : soft bxb (only kiss no sex showed)
Shounen : boy's story? It's like youth genre or sum
Shoujo : reverse of shounen
Doujinshi : fanmade comics using character that already exist.
Webtoon : comics is physical, webtoon is online
Idk if it's right or not, I might be wrong idk. Hope it helps tho.
manhwa: korean manga
manga: manga (rly ??) (japan)
manhua: chinese manga
Bara: yaoi with muscle man, yaoi target women bara targets men, more or less. But lots of muscle men, and hairy
one shot: manga that last one chapter. Some manga where one shot that become popular and so the author could serialize it but it doesn't always work like that
shounen ai: soft yaoi, no sex scene
yaoi: BL (you asked what manga was.. so you never know...)
Shounen: manga for boys (typically One Piece)
Shoujo: manga for girls (any regular love story)
Doujinshi..... not really sure about that one... I think its amateurish manga ?
Webtoon is a format, if you see a comic colorized, in only one page and you must scroll down to read it, its a webtoon. When i discovered webtoons, and was... +/- 5years ago, back then it was korean and publised by naver on the "webtoon" website/app. Now there are other app, and webtoon can be made anywhere but yeah, you got the hang of it
So I hear a lot of terms but don't know the exact meaning of them.. Can someone plz help?? Ik it's a lot of words.. If I spelled something wrong plz tell me so I don't do it in the future..
Words: manhwa, manga, manhua, bara, one-shot, canon, shounen ai, shounen, shoujo and doujinshi.. Also webtoon?? Idk if it's a term but I heard it being used b4.. Is it a term??