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Study Korean Together
Приєднався 3 бер 2016
I am a native English speaker, and, as I learn more and more Korean, I will make more and more videos.
Korean Transportation Vocabulary Part 2
This is Part 2! More unconventional modes of transportation in Korean. Expand your Korean vocabulary so you can describe travel in all forms!
Chart: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2024/07/chart-transportation-part-2.html
Transcript: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2024/07/korean-transportation-vocabulary-part2.html
Merchandise: studyinyang.myspreadshop.com/
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Chart: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2024/07/chart-transportation-part-2.html
Transcript: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2024/07/korean-transportation-vocabulary-part2.html
Merchandise: studyinyang.myspreadshop.com/
Like the video? Want to support me? Donate to me on Ko-fi: ko-fi.com/studykoreantogether
Переглядів: 74
Відео
Korean Vocabulary Practice 5 #shorts #short #korean
Переглядів 506 місяців тому
Practice your Korean vocabulary or learn new Korean words! #shorts #short
Korean Transportation Vocabulary
Переглядів 137Рік тому
Learn vocabulary to describe modes of transportation in Korean. Chart: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2023/12/transportation-chart-1.html Transcript: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2023/12/transportation-vocabulary.html Merchandise: studyinyang.myspreadshop.com/
Hanja Part 2
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Hanja is the use of Chinese characters in Korean writing. One way Hanja is commonly used is for the names of countries in Korean news articles. Transcript: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2023/05/hanja-part-2-names-of-countries.html Chart of Countries: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2023/05/countries-written-in-hanja.html Chart of Directions: Merch Shop: studyinyang.myspreadshop.com/
Korean Time Words Vocabulary
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Time related words: "next", "last", "today", "tomorrow", "yesterday", "tonight", seasons, months, days of the week LINKS Transcript: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2022/10/time-related-words.html Chart: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2022/10/chart-of-time-words.html Merch: studyinyang.myspreadshop.com/
Korean Future Tense - Future Time Related Words
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Making the Korean Future Tense with words like tomorrow, next week, next month, next year... and more. A bit of grammar, plus a bit of vocabulary. Links Transcript:koreantogether.blogspot.com/2022/03/korean-future-tense-part-4.html Chart:koreantogether.blogspot.com/2022/03/future-time-related-words.html Present Tense Videos: ua-cam.com/video/MHcjBZ-wTWg/v-deo.html Present Tense Chart for ㅓ verb...
Korean Future Tense- The Immediate Future/Promised Future
Переглядів 2712 роки тому
A lesson on conjugating Korean verbs into the immediate future AKA the promised future. Chart: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2022/01/immediatepromised-future-conjugation.html Transcript: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2022/02/immediate-future-promised-future.html My Shop: studyinyang.myspreadshop.com/
Korean Future Tense - Future Presumptive
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The Korean future presumptive is a way of stating what you intend to do in the future. Chart: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2021/10/future-presumptive-chart.html Transcript: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2021/10/future-presumptive.html Shop: studyinyang.myspreadshop.com/
Korean Prepositions Part 2 엔
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Learn about the Korean preposition 엔 "en" LINKS TO SUPLIMENTARY VIDEOS 는/은 "neun/eun" Subject Markers: ua-cam.com/video/B8i8ZlYpDIg/v-deo.html 에 "e" Korean Prepositions Part One: ua-cam.com/video/B7mIWEVw-MA/v-deo.html Korean Weather Vocabulary: ua-cam.com/video/D0V_FJsVzkI/v-deo.html Korean Days of the Week: ua-cam.com/video/IjKyVx5J_CA/v-deo.html Korean Probable Future Tense: ua-cam.com/video...
Korean Future Tense - Probable Future
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The Korean probable future tense is one of the most common ways of talking about the future in Korean. Chart: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2021/06/probable-future-tense-chart.html Transcript: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2021/06/the-probable-future.html Shop: shop.spreadshirt.com/studyinyang/
Korean Temperature Vocabulary
Переглядів 6473 роки тому
Learn the Korean words for Hot, Warm, Cool, Cold, Degrees, Celsius, and more! Chart: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2021/05/korean-temperature-vocabulary-chart.html Transcript: koreantogether.blogspot.com/2021/05/korean-temperature-vocabulary.html Merchandise Shop: shop.spreadshirt.ca/studyinyang/ VIDEO LINKS Casual Polite and Formal Language: ua-cam.com/video/bhaZuVrDBQE/v-deo.html Conjugation Ru...
Korean Food Vocabulary- FLASH CARD GAME
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Korean Food Vocabulary- FLASH CARD GAME
Korean Past Tense- Conjugating (ha-da) Verbs/ 하다 Verbs
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Korean Past Tense- Conjugating (ha-da) Verbs/ 하다 Verbs
Korean Past Tense- Conjugating (a) Verbs/ 아Verbs
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Korean Past Tense- Conjugating (a) Verbs/ 아Verbs
Korean Past Tense- Conjugating (eo) Verbs/ 어Verbs
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Korean Past Tense- Conjugating (eo) Verbs/ 어Verbs
Korean Pronouns improved pronunciation
Переглядів 2,4 тис.5 років тому
Korean Pronouns improved pronunciation
Thank you very much
this is some gold being presented, I must be very lucky that I could've just seen it, thanks
I know this video is 7 years old but I’m just starting to learn Korean and this video is so helpful. I keep referring back to this video as I’m slowly learning the Korean alphabet
Yeah! Don't worry, the Korean alphabet hasn't changed since I made the video. hehehe
Such a wonderful video so helpful video선생님
You are awesome 선생님
I did it 🎉i won 🎉
Where is the image/video I only hear voice
I can see the video. Try reloading it.
So two dogs would be 개들?
개들 means dogs
@@StudyKoreanTogether yea sorry idk why I said two dogs 😭
I'm a self taught learner, your lessons are so useful, thank you so much
Note for myself - if it helps you too, then help yourself. 1. A Syllable is arranged in a character block 2. The 1st position is always a consonant and The 2nd position is always vowel (sometime it can be a consonant, happens rarely)and the 3rd position can be either a consonant and a vowel. 3. The vertical vowels always go beside the first consonant and the horizontal one always go below the first Is concerned. 4. Some syllable has only 2 Letters And if they have 3 letters - the 3rd letter is always a consonant and that position is called the batchim position. 5.
Aah, thank you so much! 💐Success! Big thumbs up! This is about the 4th video I tried, as I am one of those people who needs to ALSO see the romanisation along with the Hangul, and the other videos left out the romanisation. Love the chart, too! Will subscribe.
Thank you! I like to keep my videos accessible to people who are still in the process of mastering Hangeul.❤
You are very creative and I love how you memorize the Chinese Characters.❤
It's always fun to come up with memory devises for Hanja, even when they turn out a little crazy.
Theres more forms of 들😊
Thank you maam ,, realy helpful,
I think that's not the pronounciation of numbers ?
Great, in-depth explanations. I appreciate the full story behind the words. Thanks!
Discusting
Amazing explanation thank you.
2:06 but what if you dont know the name?
Keep watching to 2:10
@@StudyKoreanTogether yeah i have a bad habbit xD i watched it and forgot to remove but ty for reply :D
very good, simple and clear and covers all
This video was really good. Thank you!
This information is very helpful for me! I am creating my own lesson guide and always felt Korean future tense was all about probable occurrence! You are the only one who has confirmed my thoughts!
Thank you so much it is to understand and fun
thx for teachin me chineese🇨🇳🇨🇳🇨🇳🇨🇳🇨🇳🇨🇳
It's Korean. These numbers came from Chinese, but counting in Chinese is noticeably different. ua-cam.com/video/kNKlMfvbVT4/v-deo.html
helpful but please remember hangul is not always pronounced how it's spelled phonetically
This is a godsend! finally somebody made an overwiev of the rules. Now I just need to practice! Thank you! You are a great teacher!
Why is she saying 월요일 like that 😂
It's so fun to see the parallels between Korean and Japanese. This is basically the equivalent of には
This is where my knowledge of japanese grammar comes in handy
Very nice explanation. It's extremely difficult to anglicize these concepts and the tenses verbix provided had no context. However I agree the pronunciation of consonants and vowels is difficult to stomach and should probably be redone by a native speaker.
thank you so much.! I saw a lot of videos about the subject marker, but i am still confuse how to use them..not until I watched this video. Now i already understand how to use the two subject markers.
I can use 에서 for example like i came from india 저는 인도 에서 왔습니다 and this sentence will be perfectly correct
Yes, except don't put a space between 인도 and 에서. 저는 인도에서 왔습니다
@@StudyKoreanTogether then why are you saying in the video not to do this???
@@effyloveskpop Don't use it with 있어요. You can use is with 왔어요.
some pronounce 서 so and some se. it is very confusing
Thank you so much for your videos. Finally specific teaching on Korean on UA-cam!
What about the conjugation of 을 거야? *Oops nevermind, i forgot its only for saying you'll help someone 😂
Thank you. I've been searching for a video that tells the difference between 겠다 and ㄹ 거예요. 😂
Glad it was helpful!
your pronounciation sucks and is so wrong
Thank you
Ok, but how is it pronounced...😶
That's like asking how are these pronounced: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. It depends on what language you are speaking, doesn't it 😉? Pronouncing these words in Korean is not within the scope of this video.
I ate 공류 at dinner
Thank you.
Literally the worst pronunciation of the Korean language I've ever heard in my life lol was it really that hard to find a native speaker?
ㅓ sounds most like the "aw" as in the English word "Saw" or if you want to use "u" as an approximation it would be the "u" sound in the English word "bulb" as in a "light bulb". I hope this helps. I know the wrongness that can come from the paradigms created by comparing 한국말, 한국어 with English single letters. I still strongly recommend everyone just write down the Korean character and keep listening over and over till they accurately know, remember and can pronounce the correct sounds. Hope this helps.
Ok. I was trying to overlook the mispronunciations because so far your rules and technical information are spot on, but when you actually said saRanghe for 사랑해 that is clearly pronounced "sah-dahng-hay" with a clear "D" sound not "R" sound I had to stop. ㄹ sounds like "L", "R" and "D" in some places. It's actually none of them, but that's the closest English can get. I recommend everyone not develop paradigms by comparing if you can. Everyone knows romanization is horrible! So teaching should never use it verbally. I truly want to learn absolutely correctly. I almost completely know the rules and have great pronunciation, I just need to grow my vocabulary. I found this video looking to confirm what I was thinking about showing ownership. Please everyone understand that her information is right so far, it's just her pronunciation needs work. Not her accent. Her accent is fine. As I pointed out with the 사랑해 example. I wish you luck.
Here is a native Korean saying 사랑해요. Fellow students, you can decide for yourself what it sounds like. ua-cam.com/video/lMFrVYbZ088/v-deo.html
@@StudyKoreanTogether 안녕하세요 크리스토퍼입니다. 감사합니다! 저는 한국말, 한국어 잘 못해요. 죄송합니다. So I'll stick to English for the most part for now. Looking back at this sorry in advance it became such a huge post. I just wanted to explain everything. Many teaching sources often make a special point to point out that in that position ㄹ should clearly be pronounced with a "D" sound. I just heard it so when I developed a deeper interest in South Korea and started learning I had already heard it. Thus no paradigms. Here is a copy of my post made some time ago on that particular video you provided a link to. Yea, I watched it last Valentine's day and got a positive reply from them. 👍🏻 Copy: "안녕하세요 크리스입니다! (안녕 "peace" 하세요 "do" with respect) Not literally "Hello". lol Spreading the valentine love through helping with understanding. I've been on a pronunciation/translation kick today so I'm going to ask just to get it out there. 죄송합니다. Why do we keep letting "d" sound be represented by "r"? It's all romanization's fault. It causes so many pronunciation errors. Ugh! lol. It really is being pronounced correctly in this video as (sah-dahng-hay). From an American English no accent reference: ㅅ = "s" sound with a slight lisp ㅏ = "ah" sound like the "a" in "Father". ㄹ = "L, R or D" sound ("r" never sounds like a "d" in English so I wish we would just start using "d". Romanization is HORRIBLE! Spread the word. Down with romanization! lol) ㅇ = "silent if at the beginning of a syllabic block, or "ng" like in "king" if at the end of a syllabic block. ㅎ = "h" sound ㅐ = "ay" sound, like in "day" 사랑해, "sah-dahng-hey" (Love you). This would be the correct representation of the pronunciation and translation of the word. Hope this helps. :-) Much love to you all! ^_^" 90 day Korean is pretty good. I started with KoreanClass101 and Talk To Me In Korean. But I kept wanting to know what words actually meant. For example: 안녕하세요. We are told it means "Hello", but it really doesn't! It means "Peace do". 안녕 means "peace" 하세요 means "do" with the 요 on the end showing respect. It expresses "I intend a peaceful interaction and I'm showing respect." It's used the same as saying "Hello" in English. So "Peace do" is the most common way Koreans greet someone. There. See? This taught the words, spelling, literal word for word translation, sentence structure, word meaning and sentence meaning all in one little lesson. This is my teaching program so far and how I wanted to learn, but I REFUSE to use romanization. So I asked many times if they had or could consider making videos that said the word in Korean then told what it literally means then explain what it would be equivalent to saying in English. Finally I found 한국언니 Korean Unnie. She actually teaches the way I had been asking for. I've nearly perfected my pronunciation and have pretty much all the rules. 받침 "Baht-cheem" and consonant assimilation was fun. lol. They actually explained a lot though. Now I'm mostly working on my vocabulary. Soooo much vocabulary to learn. I found your video searching to make sure I was using 의 to show possession in the correct way. Adding characters to show possession isn't always necessary. Sometimes instead of saying 김의 카메라 Kim's camera you can just say 김 카메라 Kim camera and it's just understood what you mean. Anyway I liked the way you were teaching. The visuals and explanation. I was just afraid of new learners getting the wrong idea from the pronunciation and becoming incorrect speakers. So I had to say something. I would have appreciated that when I was new. I figured if you knew well enough to be teaching you surely would have known well enough to pronounce more accurately. lol. I only just noticed you already dealt with this issue on a few of your videos. So I'm sorry. I hope I didn't offend, embarrass you or hurt your feelings. I didn't mean to. Maybe I took it wrong, but you sounded so professional I was shocked at the errors. Yes that was a compliment to make up for any offense, but it's true. It almost seemed like you learned super well from a book so you knew the rules you were teaching exactly, but had never had a chance to actually hear or listen to Korean. Or maybe you just jumped into teaching too soon. Heck I didn't know. lol. I mean I'm still learning too. I'm also writing a book and have created a really good PDF quick reference learn Korean guide already, but I don't know if I'm ready to make teaching videos yet. So I just wanted to help point it out. I do think you're going to be a very good teacher. Anyway I think you get the idea. If there's anything I can help with just let me know here and I'll respond. Hope this helps!
@@kaimagnus Wow man, thanks for your interest in what I'm doing here. I'm happy to hear what you have to say. Good luck with your book. 🙂
@@StudyKoreanTogether Well truth is I had such a hard time when I first got started learning I hate to think of anyone else going through issues. Not to mention when I do get started teaching I hope someone would let me know. I don't want to be left in a proverbial situation where I have hair out of place and people just let me look goofy instead of telling me. lol. Oh and I was in rare form at the time I posted that. I went over my original post and edited it. I made one statement that sounded different than I meant it because you can't hear inflection in text. I meant the entire thing light hearted, but it sounded harsh. Again I'm so sorry. Like I said if you ever want help or an outside opinion I'll be glad to help. And I can offer a lot because I've been through and understand pretty much every obstacle you can. Like you said in your other video we're all learning together. 👍🏻 Looking forward to more from your channel. 😁
i don't understand the spelling of beans. i mean, 'ㄹ' is lieul, but you're pronouncing it like 'ㄴ' (nieun)... please help
Good question. This is because of Consonant Assimilation. See my video ua-cam.com/video/voyClVHyGHU/v-deo.html
Sorry this is so hard to watch like you really got the Trish paytas kind of pronunciation
ANSWERS TO PRACTICE QUESTIONS 1. will cook 요리할게/요리할게요/요리할겁니다 2. will clean 청소할게/청소할게요/청소할겁니다 3. will bring 데려올게/데려올게요/데려올겁니다 4. will fight 싸울게/싸울게요/싸울겁니다 5. will wash 씻을게/씻을게요/씻을겁니다 6. will pay 낼게/낼게요/낼겁니다 7. will work 근무할게/근무할게요/근무할겁니다 8. will work 일할게/일할게요/일할겁니다
im confused about how you would say for example "i love myself" like is it different in korean like in English then just "me"?
"myself" in Korean is 자신(ja-shin). I love myself is 저 자신을 사랑해요. (jeo ja-shin-eul sa-rang-hae-yo) in the polite form.
Thank you!!!