I feel like half the videos in this series I’m like, “Wait, how did you know I was confused about that?!?!” Thank you Billy for teasing apart all of the concepts in Korean that seem so similar but are different in nuance.
Oh god thank you so much! Been looking for the answer for 3rd person "want" for ages! You have by far the best and most thorough lessons on UA-cam! Thank you so much! ❤
Wow... I just made the mistake of using 고 싶다 when describing a friend and my tutor was like... "You can't say it like this..." 🤣 I didn't know about the nuance of 원하다 either. Great video! Love the shortened format 🙌🏿
this is amazing,, the explanation is so clear and wow,, thank you so much Billy!! people will soon realise this channel's utmost worth,, u deserve it,, this content is amazing❤️
COMPOUND VERBS 가지다 (to carry) + 오다 (to come) = to carry something to me = 가져와 BRING 가지다 (to carry) + 가다 (to go) = to carry something away from me = 가져가 TO TAKE
I'm just leisurely watching this without making any notes while lying on my bed but somehow it's easy for me to understand especially the 3rd person part. Thanks!
If you ask a question to someone using ㄹ래 it's "do you want to...?" 먹고 싶어요? = Do you want to eat? 먹을래요? = Do you want to eat? The ㄹ래 form has the nuance of not being so insistent upon receiving an answer from someone, unlike the 고 싶다 form, and is therefore a little more polite. ㄹ래 is also used to express strong intention. "저는 먹을래요." I WILL eat. I very strongly intend on eating, regardless of what you say. It's easier to understand in contrast to the ㄹ게요 form which expresses weak intention: "저는 먹을게요." I will eat, if that's alright with you; I'll eat unless you want something.
You only use it when youre actually about to do it and it also shows that your intention to do it and that you really want to do it and about to kind of.
Thanks for the video, it really helped me. I have one little question about the 고 싶어하다 tho: if my friend just told me he wants to go, my other friend didn't see/hear it and i tell her "조시도 가고 *싶어요*", will she directly assume he talked to me just now or just think I'm bad at korean? 🤔
좋아요 uses the subject marking particles. youre generally saying its good or its good to you as in you like it or you're fine with it. 좋아해요 uses object marking particle. you are saying that you actively like whatever youre talking about. as an example "i like bts" uses 좋아해요. but if someone asked you what music they should play you could say "im fine with ..." and that uses 좋아요. hope this makes it clear
돈을 가지고 있다 - 1) your mom wants coffee but she didn't take her wallet frpm home - 나 지갑/돈 가지고 있다. 커피 사 줄게 돈이 있어요 2) - your child worries that you have no money. because of it she/he is shy to ask you to give them money - 엄만 돈 있으니까 걱정말고 맛있는 사 먹어
Thank you so much your seriously the best Korean teacher on UA-cam! These lessons help out miles more than other resources I've seen!
You're very welcome! And I'll be restarting these live streams in less than 2 weeks :D
@@GoBillyKorean ooooh no way! Good to know and thanks so much! Looking forward to it 😆👍
I think it's so good that you made this kind of abridged version of your live class, Billy. Thank you so much, it's very useful!
I think about -ha-da as "to do" or "something doing in motion", which means "still in action".
우와! 저는 한국어 중급 학생이라도 이 영상에 "가지다", "있다", 하고 "원하다"에 대해 배운 게 많았네요! 빌리 선생님 감사합니다!
After over 2 yrs learning I'm just now learning not to use object marker with 있다, or never remembered!
I feel like half the videos in this series I’m like, “Wait, how did you know I was confused about that?!?!” Thank you Billy for teasing apart all of the concepts in Korean that seem so similar but are different in nuance.
Oh god thank you so much! Been looking for the answer for 3rd person "want" for ages! You have by far the best and most thorough lessons on UA-cam! Thank you so much! ❤
U really explained it perfectlyㅜㅜ very helpful for me as a korean teacher for indonesian people. Thank u so much!
holy but seriously your lessons are too good ohmygod it's so clear now
영어 공부 중인 한국인인데 설명이 굉장히 명확해서 영어 공부하는 데 도움이 되네요 ㅋㅋ 좋은 영상입니다!
I explained in my video how different is between N 을/를 V고 싶다 and N 이/가 V 고 싶다, but it's in German. Anyway, good explanation! 👏👏👏
This is a really good lesson.
Wow... I just made the mistake of using 고 싶다 when describing a friend and my tutor was like... "You can't say it like this..." 🤣 I didn't know about the nuance of 원하다 either. Great video! Love the shortened format 🙌🏿
thx. i've been always curious about 가지고 있어. this helped a lot
와~~~ 덕번에 제 한국어를 빨리 나아지고 있어요.. 재미있는 영상이에요. 사실이에요.. 많이 배우고 싶어요. 요즘에 저는 시간이 없는데요 어떡하지 ㅎㅎㅎ
Nice background, got a nice vibe to it.
this is amazing,, the explanation is so clear and wow,, thank you so much Billy!! people will soon realise this channel's utmost worth,, u deserve it,, this content is amazing❤️
thank you again. Im replaying this to revise
4:33 7:08 why are these so funny
COMPOUND VERBS
가지다 (to carry) + 오다 (to come) = to carry something to me = 가져와 BRING
가지다 (to carry) + 가다 (to go) = to carry something away from me = 가져가 TO TAKE
Thank you sooo much for clearing the confusion between 있다 and 가지다
I was so confused about those before watching this video
I love your video!!You’re a fantastic teacher!! 앞으로도 영상 잘볼게요~~!! 구독하고 가요 ㅎㅎㅎ 👍
This is so good 👌✨
I'm just leisurely watching this without making any notes while lying on my bed but somehow it's easy for me to understand especially the 3rd person part. Thanks!
about 있다 and 없다 (around 3:08) i can also say "*제* 건물이 있어요" ?? i fell like i never heard, but it doesn't sound completely weird
If it's *your* building.
@@GoBillyKorean yes yes if this is what i mean, thanks !
What about 을래/ㄹ래? I've seen it being translated as want,would or even will
If you ask a question to someone using ㄹ래 it's "do you want to...?" 먹고 싶어요? = Do you want to eat? 먹을래요? = Do you want to eat? The ㄹ래 form has the nuance of not being so insistent upon receiving an answer from someone, unlike the 고 싶다 form, and is therefore a little more polite. ㄹ래 is also used to express strong intention. "저는 먹을래요." I WILL eat. I very strongly intend on eating, regardless of what you say. It's easier to understand in contrast to the ㄹ게요 form which expresses weak intention: "저는 먹을게요." I will eat, if that's alright with you; I'll eat unless you want something.
I did a live stream about this form that you can find in my playlist. It was a live stream about future forms.
Thanks both 😊😊😊
You only use it when youre actually about to do it and it also shows that your intention to do it and that you really want to do it and about to kind of.
I have the building.
You exist a good joke.
@@teerich2011 lmfao
thnx
Now I understand why is it like that in a song APRIL - Oh! my mistake
Thank you very much for the amazing channel 😍❤❤ ..
Your videos are helpful ..
i just wanna drop my honest I LOVE YOU and THANK YOU
한국말 정말 잘 하시네요...
boy .. thanx :)
Im korean, and I didnt know Korean would be this hard before I came across this video roaming around on UA-cam! Feeling so bad for Korean learners:p
Thanks for the video, it really helped me.
I have one little question about the 고 싶어하다 tho: if my friend just told me he wants to go, my other friend didn't see/hear it and i tell her "조시도 가고 *싶어요*", will she directly assume he talked to me just now or just think I'm bad at korean? 🤔
You would still not use it. You'd use ~싶어하다 or ~싶대(요) or another form like that.
@@GoBillyKorean Okay! Thanks, Billy ^-^
갖다 = 가지다
갖고 = 가지고
갖는 = 가지는
That is right.
THANK YOU SOOOOO MUCH YOUVE MADE MY KOREAN SO EASYYY💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙
Hi Billy, can I join the Discord room?
discordapp.com/invite/tJmt6zm
9:23 so can I use this when i need to express my intense desire for cheese? 😂😂
Yes, you can.
THANK YOU SO MUCHHHHH
"this rabbit is not healthy" hahaha
thank you so much !
[Noun] + 이/가 있다 = [Noun] exist(s), to have [Noun], there's [Noun].
also, every time you say “I have a pen” I want to say “I have an apple” lol
wait, I don’t think I was aware of 가지고 오다/가다. I thought to bring something was 가져오다/가다?
You can use that too.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
9:22 i can't stop laughing
Can you tell me what is the difference between 좋아요 and 좋아해요 please ? (
k chim 좋다 means to be good and 좋아하다 means to like
좋아요 uses the subject marking particles. youre generally saying its good or its good to you as in you like it or you're fine with it. 좋아해요 uses object marking particle. you are saying that you actively like whatever youre talking about. as an example "i like bts" uses 좋아해요. but if someone asked you what music they should play you could say "im fine with ..." and that uses 좋아요.
hope this makes it clear
wuts wrong with backgrounds ?
널 = 너를
~고싶다 = to want to, to wanna
토끼를 안 키우고싶고 안 안아줄거야!!!!
돈을 가지고 있다 - 1) your mom wants coffee but she didn't take her wallet frpm home - 나 지갑/돈 가지고 있다. 커피 사 줄게
돈이 있어요 2) - your child worries that you have no money. because of it she/he is shy to ask you to give them money - 엄만 돈 있으니까 걱정말고 맛있는 사 먹어
9:22 to see Billy getting in your face
I made the mistake using 원하다 then they corrected me saying to say 주세요 instead
how the heck does korean keep managing to make simple concepts unnecessarily complicated?
Ikr.
아재 뭔데 나보다 한글을 더 잘암?