How Similar are Japanese and Korean?

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  • Опубліковано 3 чер 2024
  • Two of the most popular Asian languages are Japanese and Korean, and there are millions of fans of Japanese and Korean pop culture around the world. How similar are Korean and Japanese? If you learn one, will you be able to communicate with people who speak the other language? Find out!
    For lots of great Japanese lessons for students of all levels, visit JapanesePod101: bit.ly/japanese-pod-101. And for Korean, check out KoreanPod101: bit.ly/Koreanclass101.
    (Full disclosure: if you sign up for a premium account, Langfocus receives a small referral fee. But the free account is great too!)
    Support Langfocus on Patreon: / langfocus
    langfocus.com
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    Music: "Livin` Up" by Otis McDonald.
    Outro Music: "Voodoo Like You Do" by Huma-Huma.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 10 тис.

  • @Langfocus
    @Langfocus  4 роки тому +222

    Hi everyone! If you're currently learning Japanese, check out JapanesePod101 ►( bit.ly/japanese-pod-101 )◄ - one of the best ways to learn Japanese. For Korean, check out its sister site KoreanClass101 ►( bit.ly/Koreanclass101 )◄
    For 33 other languages, check out my review! ► langfocus.com/innovative-language-podcasts/ ◄
    I'm an active member on several Pod101 sites, and I hope you'll enjoy them as much as I do!
    (Full disclosure: if you sign up for a premium account, Langfocus receives a small referral fee. But if I didn't like it, I wouldn't recommend it, and the free account is pretty good on its own!)

    • @FaisalKhan-nl8xs
      @FaisalKhan-nl8xs 4 роки тому +4

      🇺🇸🇰🇷🇯🇵

    • @FaisalKhan-nl8xs
      @FaisalKhan-nl8xs 4 роки тому +2

      @방개튀김would you rather have 8 south koreas🇰🇷🇰🇷🇰🇷🇰🇷🇰🇷🇰🇷🇰🇷🇰🇷 or would you rather have 3 uaes🇦🇪🇦🇪🇦🇪

    • @halin0519
      @halin0519 4 роки тому +1

      그냥 둘다 한문에서 비롯된 말이라서
      그런거 아냐???

    • @FaisalKhan-nl8xs
      @FaisalKhan-nl8xs 4 роки тому +1

      @@halin0519Do you like seuol or busan

    • @FaisalKhan-nl8xs
      @FaisalKhan-nl8xs 3 роки тому

      @켁켁 😶😶😶😶😶😶😕🤨

  • @ndu192
    @ndu192 4 роки тому +2040

    haha you speak korean like a japanese speaker. Really interesting hearing you stressing the wrong syllables in the exact same way japanese would! Perfectly understandable but fascinating none the less

    • @OokileyGMR
      @OokileyGMR 4 роки тому +168

      It's cause he speaks japanese too. He pretty much says it in the video tho

    • @Dhurrmia
      @Dhurrmia 4 роки тому +100

      I noticed it too. I'm not a native speaker of either of the language but even I got it cause I watch a lot of Korean dramas

    • @olivia4924
      @olivia4924 4 роки тому +53

      His Japanese pronunciation is also kind of different sometimes. that's not so weird, though. so I don't think his speaking is like a Japanese speaker.

    • @BY-sh6gt
      @BY-sh6gt 4 роки тому +63

      @@olivia4924 yeah he has that westerner-ish fluent accent tho imo

    • @alexsakon
      @alexsakon 4 роки тому +48

      @@olivia4924 correct, he totally speaks japanese like a NON native speaker with an accent, although not horrendous.

  • @Muslim_Lady
    @Muslim_Lady 7 років тому +1479

    저는 현재 한국말을 공부하고 있는 아랍 사람입니다. 한국, 한국사, 한식 그리고 한국말을 좋아합니다.

    • @60mmmortarcrewfdcs.koreana62
      @60mmmortarcrewfdcs.koreana62 7 років тому +65

      wow, did you type it by yourself without google translate?, if so, you are really good at Korean since I can understand it clearly. You talked exactly same as native Korean speaker lol (I am Korean btw)

    • @Muslim_Lady
      @Muslim_Lady 7 років тому +45

      Csp Sk Blood Contract .. Thank you. yes, I wrote it by myself. I have been studying Korean for about 2 years now. I am still lacking a lot though. I need to especially work on vocabulary and practice writing and reading more.

    • @Muslim_Lady
      @Muslim_Lady 7 років тому +20

      101 .. 감사합니다 ^^

    • @mamxyy
      @mamxyy 7 років тому +36

      Muslim Lady 좋아해주셔서 감사해요~😃😃😃

    • @sorry2414
      @sorry2414 7 років тому +33

      오 한국말 정말 잘 하시네요!

  • @SkaterStimm
    @SkaterStimm 3 роки тому +931

    I studied Japanese too, have a degree in it, but I always found the Korean students have a huge advantage over anyone else when it came to learning Japanese. They picked it up so fast. They had very good pronunciation and they could articulate themselves with the right sentence structure with ease. I felt like Yoda trying to speak normally, I had to twist my brain to almost speak backwards. I would have thought that Chinese would have the same advantage, but that is completely untrue, they would have a lot of difficulty with pronunciation and had just as much problems with the structure as I did (If not more), the only advantage they had was learning to write Kanji.

    • @SkaterStimm
      @SkaterStimm 3 роки тому +80

      @Chris Anderson Chinese is not at all similar to Japanese or Korean. Like I said before Japanese only shares some of the written characters and very very little pronunciation.

    • @mikewallice2795
      @mikewallice2795 3 роки тому +42

      @Chris Anderson All Asians are similar? Indian, Thai, Burma, Viet, Pinoy, Malaysia, Indonesia, Pakistan, Kazahkstan, Middle east is part of West Asia, and many...so how all Asians are similar?

    • @HughMyron372
      @HughMyron372 3 роки тому +49

      Skater Stimm Yeah if anything Chinese has more similarities to English with its sentence structure and word order. Makes sense that both English speakers and Chinese speakers struggle with spoken Japanese

    • @mikewallice2795
      @mikewallice2795 3 роки тому +4

      @@ivantruth7229 Well, Asia is the biggest continent/part of the world. Actually, West Asia is the proper term for nowadays "middle east" because originally the term middle east were used to refer to nowadays South east asia. The reason being is because South east asia is in between West Asia and East Asia. And also South east asia is the main gateway from West to East and vice versa for merchants, sailors, etc, because they have to passed through the Straits of Malacca which was an international hub where the port of Malacca located in the past and still is the most important route for ships even today that connects West and East.

    • @edamame9198
      @edamame9198 3 роки тому +13

      Even the structure and grammar of Chinese and Japanese are super different (Korean and Japanese are similar). I think Chinese still have advantage to learn Japanese. Japanese have a huge percentage kanji. Some Kanji’s pronunciation are similar to Chinese. Korean delete Kanji but they remain lots of pronunciation as same as Chinese. (Only few difference). Japanese only parts of kanji pronunciation are similar to Chinese but when Chinese and Japanese write their sentence on paper. Probably both of them will know the general meaning of each other. In other words, if you learn one of those three languages, you will have advantage to learn the other two.

  • @user-in1td9co8z
    @user-in1td9co8z 2 роки тому +363

    I'm a Japanese studying Korean. Korean is easy to study. I'm doing my best to learn it in a year.

    • @fcte6464
      @fcte6464 Рік тому +29

      応援します!

    • @kek490
      @kek490 Рік тому +57

      Hangul looks cool, but speaking is pain; Japanese sounds cool, but writing is a nightmare; can't understand any of you yet though

    • @GooGoo_ll
      @GooGoo_ll Рік тому +9

      @kek lol it's true

    • @dynamo3590
      @dynamo3590 Рік тому +1

      應援してますよう!!

    • @user-eb1dt9pp8t
      @user-eb1dt9pp8t Рік тому +7

      사사쨩 파이팅

  • @roylandmaines299
    @roylandmaines299 8 років тому +2345

    The Korean alphabet is so logical and easy.

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  8 років тому +696

      +Abdullah Alrasheed Yeah, some people learn it on the airplane before they arrive in Korea. :D

    • @ricardoh.u.1119
      @ricardoh.u.1119 8 років тому +155

      +Langfocus Not that much. Korean spelling rules are much trickier than u might think.. Even Koreans struggle with it. To give an easy example, some consonants when are in the last position of a syllable and meets certain consonants on the beginning of the next syllable it changes completely.. EX.: 왕십리 (One Seou's area name) . If you read syllable by syllable it would be 왕 WANG 십 SHIP (SIP) 리 RI , but combined you read as WANGSHIMNI .. P-->M and R-->N.
      If you have a Korean friend, try to type nonsense (but pronounceable words) on you word processor and ask him to read it.

    • @roylandmaines299
      @roylandmaines299 8 років тому +12

      +Ricardo H. Uchimura well good think of read in an Abjad. the arabic writing is easier than it looks. alot of rules but very little illogical letters spread around. :)

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  8 років тому +212

      Ricardo H. Uchimura Yes, but I just meant they can learn the alphabet on the plane.

    • @KingofKpop
      @KingofKpop 8 років тому +7

      +Ricardo H. Uchimura It's called silent consonant.

  • @jimmiscarrey7175
    @jimmiscarrey7175 5 років тому +472

    저는 핀란드에서 사는 한국어를 공부하는 핀란드 남자이다

    • @meowBlitz
      @meowBlitz 4 роки тому +1

      Gjeldeti voi vittu käytit kääntjää :DDD

    • @user-yu3iv2xi5e
      @user-yu3iv2xi5e 4 роки тому +49

      한국어 잘하십니다!🙂

    • @meowBlitz
      @meowBlitz 4 роки тому +27

      @밍⃢쭈워너블 걍 그분이 한국말을 말하는 번역이 써는 거같에요
      그렁데 저도 핀란인

    • @user-yu3iv2xi5e
      @user-yu3iv2xi5e 4 роки тому +4

      @@meowBlitz 오 그렇군요

    • @user-oj7yz1rn2j
      @user-oj7yz1rn2j 4 роки тому +5

      한국어 잘하시네여 ㅋ

  • @ChrisChoi123
    @ChrisChoi123 4 роки тому +675

    As a korean speaker, i always was surprised to find out how similar japanese was to korean, through the dozens of anime i watched. in fact, it made me so fascinated that i started to finally learn japanese about a week ago. i feel like koreans will have a much easier time learning japanese and getting the pronunciation right compared to any other language speaker in the world. or maybe its cuz im just a weeb, which is also very true

    • @vaffangool9196
      @vaffangool9196 3 роки тому +44

      *It seems like Koreans* (or girl group members, anyway) have trouble pronouncing ず (zu) and つ (tsu), it always seems to come out 즈 (jeu) or 추 (chu). Apart from those exceptions, there are more sounds that exist in Korean that don't exist in Japanese, so native Koreans are more successful at pronouncing Japanese words than most Japanese are at pronouncing spoken Korean. Learning to pronounce consonant blends can't be nearly as burdensome as learning written Japanese though. I'm overseas Japanese so I'm below-kindergarten level at kanji but I can read Hangul quite easily, because 트와이스 진짜 좋아. IZ*ONE permanent!

    • @vaffangool9196
      @vaffangool9196 3 роки тому +3

      @제이홉후배
      아 진짜요? 대박이다! 嫉妬ている…日本か韓国でTWICEを見るのは素晴らしいことですよね~ !🤯

    • @Audrey-uq7dm
      @Audrey-uq7dm 3 роки тому +14

      As a Japanese speaker, I feel the same way watching kdramas

    • @vaffangool9196
      @vaffangool9196 3 роки тому +2

      @@Audrey-uq7dm
      *Which dramas* do you watch? I typically only watch the shows with girl group members in the cast, like Reply 1988 and Hotel del Luna.

    • @Audrey-uq7dm
      @Audrey-uq7dm 3 роки тому +5

      @@vaffangool9196 I like those recent popular ones. Like, Itaewon Class, True Beauty, Extraordinary You and It's Okay to Not Be Okay. I haven't watched these 2 that you mentioned but I'm planning to watch Reply 1988

  • @clow3701
    @clow3701 2 роки тому +269

    I'm Japanese and am currently learning Korean online, found this video while bored and wow this helped me understand the similarities in the easiest way possible, and also felt so much more motivated to keep studying!!!

    • @user-dd4ry7tj2l
      @user-dd4ry7tj2l Рік тому +26

      omg i'm korean trying to learn japanese,,, good luck!!

    • @clow3701
      @clow3701 Рік тому +14

      @@user-dd4ry7tj2l thank you! Fighting 💗

    • @ykk7482
      @ykk7482 Рік тому +5

      Korean and Japanese is really similar especially end of word is almost same
      That meaning is kind of [Yes]
      So desu 'ne'(そうです'ね' 소데스'네') -
      geu run 'ne'(ぐろん'ね' 그렇'네')
      So desu 'yo' よ - geu run ne 'yo' 요
      So desu 'ka'? か - geu rut seum ni 'kka'?까
      So 'da'そうだ - geu rut 'da' 그렇다

    • @psuirsea5522
      @psuirsea5522 Рік тому +1

      @@ykk7482
      Korean Japanese, Okinawan, Manchurian Mongolian languages all belong to the same language group............... very similar each other just like German, Dutch and English..or French Spanish Romanian Portuguese and Italian

    • @user-lg9or9qx6z
      @user-lg9or9qx6z 8 місяців тому +3

      @@psuirsea5522 They don't Korean has an isolated language tree meaning that it has no connection with other languages. The reason Japanese and Korean are similar is just because they are really close to each other many elements could have easily influenced each one of them

  • @scheimong
    @scheimong 6 років тому +678

    When I visited Korea, I felt that they treated their language as a proud invention, and for a good reason. I am Chinese and I understand the frustration non-native speakers have when learning those several thousand Chinese characters. Now I have learned a bit about Japanese, and oh boy it's even worse. So basically Koreans at one point in time simply went 'oh fuck it we're done, start from scratch'. Good call I'd say.

    • @sleepycryptid8275
      @sleepycryptid8275 5 років тому +89

      The Korean just said "Haha, yeet!" and yeeted Hanja out for Hangul.

    • @LittleWhole
      @LittleWhole 5 років тому +63

      Mao was originally going to get rid of Hanzi completely, but Stalin talked him out of it. I personally feel like if Hanzi characters were taken completely out of Chinese it would take a huge chunk out of Chinese culture. They've been developing for 5000 years and it just kinda feels wrong.

    • @user-qlwueyacvkl
      @user-qlwueyacvkl 5 років тому +13

      lmao you're somewhat right actually

    • @uhchakap
      @uhchakap 5 років тому +44

      "Oh fuck it were done, start from scratch"

    • @radopanchamu726halofanboi3
      @radopanchamu726halofanboi3 5 років тому +1

      hahaha... well i gotta learn the japanese language so i can say a lot of japanese Swear words to say to the damned bullies,i was like *GOD DAMN IT!* when he said 2000 Syllabaries .i can understand why the koreans started from scratch the chinese characters are very confusing especially the tones when you say chinese words and your president is shite including the ideology of your government damned comies

  • @BrentPark
    @BrentPark 6 років тому +705

    한국어를 모르고 이 정도 비교할 수 있다는 거 자체가 대단하다.
    I think You just missed that Korean also has formal language so you should have compared with it. But I think you are amazing! Thank you for sharing this video.

    • @georgepenton6023
      @georgepenton6023 6 років тому +42

      Brent Park Japanese also has formal and familiar language.

    • @s-train1764
      @s-train1764 6 років тому +17

      ㅇㅈ해야댐

    • @melloh2812
      @melloh2812 6 років тому +27

      George Penton I think he meant to compare the formalities of both languages

    • @BrentPark
      @BrentPark 6 років тому

      I know that, but he never compare with Korean formal language

    • @anhw2315
      @anhw2315 5 років тому +17

      저도 같은 생각이에요. 정말 깜짝 놀랐어요.
      私も同じ考えです。本当にびっくりしました。
      I totally agree with you. I was really superise.

  • @liz6735
    @liz6735 4 роки тому +166

    비디오는 너무 좋아요! 전 한국어를 배우는 한국에 사는 미국인이에요 ^0^ 일본어와 스페인어도 배우고 싶어요. 시간이 더 필요해요!

    • @user-cj8cq5ht7o
      @user-cj8cq5ht7o 4 роки тому +3

      😘

    • @nyangkokim8430
      @nyangkokim8430 4 роки тому +15

      한국어 잘하시네요^^♡

    • @seungchankim8967
      @seungchankim8967 3 роки тому +6

      omg i wanna learn english, spanish, japanese too :) i' korean

    • @uueon
      @uueon 2 роки тому +1

      저희 나라를 사랑해 줘서 정말 감사합니다

    • @user-vq5ib9py6r
      @user-vq5ib9py6r 2 роки тому +2

      Wow.. Your Korean is very very good....

  • @MrYougotcaught
    @MrYougotcaught 4 роки тому +429

    English: FAMILY
    Korean: KAJOK
    Japanese: KAZOKU

    • @Edhilues
      @Edhilues 4 роки тому +100

      Korean: *GAJOK

    • @MrYougotcaught
      @MrYougotcaught 4 роки тому +48

      Bae Dohyun It can also be spelled in English with the letter G, so it can be KAJOK or GAJOK. I was stationed in KUNSAN, sometimes spelled GUNSAN, and I love eating BULKOGI or BULGOGI

    • @Edhilues
      @Edhilues 4 роки тому +12

      @@MrYougotcaught I know very well about that. I suppose your intention was to show how they similarly sound, then it had to be precise this case

    • @MrYougotcaught
      @MrYougotcaught 4 роки тому +7

      Bae Dohyun well of of course my intentions was to show the similarities. What did you think I was doing? Showing differences? Lol

    • @Edhilues
      @Edhilues 4 роки тому +3

      @@MrYougotcaught Oh my goodness, why are you triggered?

  • @eugeneluv
    @eugeneluv 8 років тому +579

    Korean Writing system called Hangeul is absolutely easy
    to learn so anybody can master within a day
    but Korean language is difficult to learn
    However, Japanese language is easy to learn but Japanese writing system is very difficult and complicate to learn

    • @user-yt3go8wg3l
      @user-yt3go8wg3l 8 років тому +1

      when u listen 2 maori & any of the languges in africa, they sound so similar 2 japanese, i think those languages are so easy 4 others to speak.

    • @nath2364
      @nath2364 8 років тому +5

      Exactly.

    • @VicodinElmo
      @VicodinElmo 8 років тому +52

      Hiragana and Katakana are easy enough. Kanji is another story...

    • @user-yt3go8wg3l
      @user-yt3go8wg3l 8 років тому +19

      +Lucas Williams maybe they are kinda easy enough to learn for you, but still japanese are using kanji with hiragana & katakana(which could be complicated to read & write japanese properly, you can see them even in the japanese comic books as well), but koreans don't need to use chinese characters with hangul at all, & hangul system is way easier & sicentific than any of other languages in the world(plz don't be mad, i'm just saying what it is). even korean alphabet hangul is the easiest alphabet to be memorised, everybody can read & write in hangul in 15mins). This is what all the linguists are talking about. i personally like japanese & maori languages as well, cuz they are easy to speak, but to be honest, korean language system especially hangul is one of the most greatest work of human being in the world i guess.

    • @ParkJavi
      @ParkJavi 8 років тому +33

      As a Korean, I feel proud of the writing system King Sejong and his scholars created.. but at the same time sorry for foreigners who have to deal with all the cumbersome suffixes lol.

  • @Sojourner_in_Asia
    @Sojourner_in_Asia 7 років тому +134

    You did a great job on this video. It was clear, concise, no politics, and no favoritism. Impressive! Thank you. Keep them coming.

    • @user-fp2jq4xd1t
      @user-fp2jq4xd1t 6 років тому +7

      As a Korean, I don't think I could ever explain Korean better than him :) He was so intelligent in this kind of knowledge.

  • @mimisheean6648
    @mimisheean6648 3 роки тому +145

    I live in Japan and have been struggling to learn Japanese for two years. My Korean co-worker picked it up so fast! Now I see why.

    • @psuirsea5522
      @psuirsea5522 Рік тому +6

      i believe that you as an English native speaker can pick up German or Dutch faster than your Korean speaking co worker; your Korean speaking co worker must be struggling much much more than you in picking up German or Dutch as you do on Japanese..............

    • @nagnusyo
      @nagnusyo Рік тому +2

      @@psuirsea5522 I have a japanese friend. He even didn't learn Korean, but he was understanding my korean conversation with another friend. I was shocked.
      Some koreans can learn Japanses by just watching anime without learning text book. Learning japanese speaking and listening would be really easy for koreans. But writting and reading is hard for koreans since they use many chinese characters in writting.

    • @psuirsea5522
      @psuirsea5522 Рік тому

      @@nagnusyo
      interesting..............

  • @luno9821
    @luno9821 4 роки тому +895

    Korean is really difficult, Hangeul is easy.
    Japanese is easy, Kanji is really difficult.

    • @guywithaname5408
      @guywithaname5408 4 роки тому +300

      Japanese is not easy.

    • @kikojavier3804
      @kikojavier3804 4 роки тому +41

      Guy Withaname ive been learning the language and i can have conversations wich my japanese friends and girlfriend but the thing is im still learning hiragana so learning the language with just romaji is easy but the writing systems arent especially in japanese

    • @Estiben60
      @Estiben60 4 роки тому +120

      Japanese pronunciation is easy, but there are other aspects of the language that are difficult, besides the kanji.

    • @JorgeRahuviano
      @JorgeRahuviano 4 роки тому +21

      @@guywithaname5408 korean grammar is not easy too...

    • @weirdbutawesome8703
      @weirdbutawesome8703 4 роки тому

      Guy Withaname i believe the pronunciation is

  • @uz6924
    @uz6924 6 років тому +241

    I’ve never seen this kind of video. His summary is so good! You’re the best.

    • @TNTErick
      @TNTErick 6 років тому +6

      I'm learning both Korean and Japanese, when I was looking at the Japanese grammar I found some sound similar. Like LangFocus said, it has to be related.

  • @k24y
    @k24y 5 років тому +811

    Both Korean and Japanese can't communicate with each other at all if they didn't learn opponent's language.

    • @user-wd8wx5md5z
      @user-wd8wx5md5z 5 років тому +95

      Of course. It is like French and Spanish or Italian.

    • @wangthomas5709
      @wangthomas5709 5 років тому +170

      Japanese can read some Chinese and Chinese can read some Japanese. But both Japanese and Chinese cannot read a single word of Korean in 2019.

    • @joshuakim3896
      @joshuakim3896 5 років тому +32

      According to my dad(he's speaks Korean fluently), Some words are the same(if you just say the word(s))

    • @user-mz6oy2gx5o
      @user-mz6oy2gx5o 5 років тому +35

      In my case, i learned chinese character(hanza) when i was young. And hanza helps me learn japanese well. Pronunce of korean word is simillar with japanese hanza.

    • @benniauskrems
      @benniauskrems 5 років тому +18

      From what I heard though they can learn the other language relatively quickly because the grammar/syntax is so similar

  • @better331132
    @better331132 4 роки тому +95

    이 형 갱스터나 격투가처럼 생겼는데
    머리쓰는 사람이구나

    • @pjaenada
      @pjaenada 4 роки тому +1

      ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ

    • @user-pm3fk5ie4l
      @user-pm3fk5ie4l 3 роки тому +1

      ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ

    • @user-jg2kj8sy1b
      @user-jg2kj8sy1b 3 роки тому +1

      ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ

    • @user-ks4ru9uj4r
      @user-ks4ru9uj4r 3 роки тому +8

      외국에서 외모를 지적하는 것은 실례입니다.

    • @ch.6688
      @ch.6688 3 роки тому +6

      @@user-ks4ru9uj4r 님은 그냥 고독하게 계세요...

  • @091lsm._
    @091lsm._ 2 роки тому +17

    It's absolutely right, I've been learning korean for one a half years and I've started to learn japanese these days in korean language, to be honest I totally more understand while learning japanese in korean rather than in english. it's bcz they both have a similar pattern as well as have a lot similar vocabs so it's quite getting me easier to understand... 🇯🇵🇰🇷

  • @emilyw6762
    @emilyw6762 7 років тому +80

    I like how the Japanese word for promise is 约束, which in Chinese it means restrictions, which is kinda true , when you promise something, then you are kinda restricted and less free in a way

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  7 років тому +24

      Good observation!

    • @faheemsyed1674
      @faheemsyed1674 7 років тому +1

      Russia Good Kim Jong Un spotted

    • @bestrafung2754
      @bestrafung2754 6 років тому +1

      Russia Good
      What the fuck? All he talked about what the Japanese language. Calm the fuck down. Also people dislike the North Korean *government*, not North Korean people.

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  6 років тому +7

      Russia Good got owned. I didn't make a joke about North Korea, I made a joke about triggered idiots getting angry about flags in my thumbnails. Then Russia Good walked right in and got triggered about the flag, except from the opposite side of the spectrum. As for that joke being "racist"...lololol.
      So many clowns in the UA-cam comments.

  • @Warchgundamnow
    @Warchgundamnow 7 років тому +1077

    This video motivated me to learn Korean. (Im a Japanese speaker.)

    • @hjwo4516
      @hjwo4516 7 років тому +76

      韓国語勉強がんばってください。
      私は日本語ができる韓国人です。

    • @winterybanana
      @winterybanana 7 років тому +56

      The two languages really are very similar! I started leaning Japanese and then when I thought I somehow got to a level where I could manage basic communication, I started learning Korean... Now I'm completely mixed up....

    • @kotan7763
      @kotan7763 7 років тому +9

      マジですか!

    • @musicloverheart
      @musicloverheart 7 років тому +11

      日本語上手ね!( ´ ▽ ` )

    • @Jaenius4
      @Jaenius4 7 років тому +27

      한국어 배우세요ㅋㅋ

  • @adrianokury
    @adrianokury 3 роки тому +1

    Loved this video -- exactly what I was asking myself. Very nice research and presentation.

  • @marianemenezescoelho4493
    @marianemenezescoelho4493 3 роки тому +146

    Well, I'm Brazilian and I'd like to learn Korean and Japanese one day, both of them are beautiful languages

    • @piadas804
      @piadas804 3 роки тому +13

      Japonês não é tão difícil. Difícil é aprender kanji.

    • @marianemenezescoelho4493
      @marianemenezescoelho4493 3 роки тому +2

      @@piadas804 finalmente um br! Meu prof de inglês já tentou aprender e apanhou muito por causa do kanji

    • @piadas804
      @piadas804 3 роки тому +3

      @@marianemenezescoelho4493 sim, anos para lembrar. Mas japonês falado não é tão difícil, já que a pronúncia é fácil e a gramática é simples e tem poucas exceções.

    • @marianemenezescoelho4493
      @marianemenezescoelho4493 3 роки тому +1

      @@piadas804 sim a pronúncia é fácil principalmente em relação ao inglês e ao coreano.

    • @GraysonMejia
      @GraysonMejia 2 роки тому +1

      @@marianemenezescoelho4493 somos dois!

  • @gogos1003
    @gogos1003 7 років тому +132

    I am Korean who speaks Japanese and I approve this vid.

  • @rose319319
    @rose319319 7 років тому +1878

    욇굵인듦읺 잃걻 앎앉볾숛있읅깞 않맚 핞굵읺듦많 앎앖봃숝있겠짊

    • @user-mh7dt2wo2k
      @user-mh7dt2wo2k 7 років тому +346

      ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ씼빯

    • @user-ve3ce7uq1i
      @user-ve3ce7uq1i 6 років тому +295

      - 왏 밇칞 싰밝 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ

    • @user-mp7he4ly7z
      @user-mp7he4ly7z 6 років тому +249

      - 갲웄깄넭ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ

    • @user-bj3wl1by5s
      @user-bj3wl1by5s 6 років тому +54

      ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ

    • @dasoms
      @dasoms 6 років тому +192

      원리를 알면 읽을 수 있을거 같은데요.

  • @lalamoon77
    @lalamoon77 4 роки тому +1

    I always want to know that.Thank you for doing this video.Its really great!

  • @facundosoler2200
    @facundosoler2200 Рік тому +1

    Excellent video ! Thanks for pointing out the differences ! I'm currently trying to learn Korean on my own , I really like Japanese as well but it looks like so much more work to learn because of what you mentioned about the number of symbols they have.

  • @PrincessAmpol
    @PrincessAmpol 5 років тому +92

    Living for almost 6 years in Korea, I learned and speak Korean. I recently got into studying Japanese, and I'm learning it with a Korean textbook since it made more sense to study it with a language very similar to it. I can very much agree to your points in this video because it's the same things I realized while learning Japanese. Besides having to memorize Chinese characters (I don't know much hanja either), learning Japanese feels much more comfortable. I also finally got the answer as to why some Chinese characters sound different in Chinese, Korean and Japanese. I always thought that there's only one definite way of reading a Chinese character. Btw, great content!

    • @Madwonk
      @Madwonk Рік тому +3

      In fact, the advantage of Chinese characters is they *can* be pronounced totally differently across many languages! Even within China, a person speaking Fuzhounese and Cantonese may not be able to understand each other, but they'll usually be able to read the same books/signs/etc!

  • @2Pish
    @2Pish 5 років тому +10

    Your choice of music makes your lectures engaging and interesting. thank you for creating content like this

  • @SKMarcusA
    @SKMarcusA 2 роки тому +30

    Just came across this channel seeing the difference between Russian and Ukrainian. Looked informative and was curious about how he handles Korean vs. Japanese. I was born in Korea but studied & worked in Japan for 10+ years. I consider myself fluent in both languages. This is a good intro and very accurate. IMHO it's easier for Korean to learn to communicate in Japanese. I find that the Japanese tend to have a harder time picking up the Korean pronunciation. BUT even when Koreans learn to speak Japanese fluently as an adult, many don't pick up the subtle Japanese accents, body language, and esoteric honorifics so it's easy to tell that they are not Japanese. Also, the grammar may be similar, communication style is quite different (....Korean tends to be more direct).

  • @seinlee1951
    @seinlee1951 2 роки тому

    What an interesting point. I think you get the logic in language comparison quite well. I hope you can keep doing your great work.

  • @earlymusicmidi
    @earlymusicmidi 6 років тому +21

    Fantastic summary! Very well done! From a native speaker of Japanese and a student of many other languages.

  • @gmvisck
    @gmvisck 5 років тому +349

    Korean -ida -imnida
    Japanese -da -desu

    • @user-rl3yi5pl4n
      @user-rl3yi5pl4n 4 роки тому +14

      @@technocrats5887 일본천황이 스스로 백제혈통이라고 하는마당에 븅신인가ㅋㄱㄱ

    • @doodoo7922
      @doodoo7922 4 роки тому

      @꼬미튜브TuBe
      백제가 전해준건 한자인데 그게 백제것임?

    • @gmvisck
      @gmvisck 4 роки тому

      @DushmanYT mask×2

    • @yogadgsix
      @yogadgsix 4 роки тому

      You idiot. Japanese : masu and desu.

    • @gmvisck
      @gmvisck 4 роки тому +4

      You id
      Masu 합니다
      Desu 입니다

  • @Jamesjihoonkwak
    @Jamesjihoonkwak 2 роки тому +96

    My wife comes from kyungsang providence in South Korea where their dialect has a bit of up and down intonation compared to the flat Seoul dialect. When I hear Japanese speakers speak from a distance and don’t try to focus real hard I sometimes think they are speaking in kyungsang dialect because the intonation sounds similar. I’ve smiled a number of times coming closer to these speakers realizing they were speaking in Japanese.

    • @yo2trader539
      @yo2trader539 Рік тому +9

      That's because southern parts of the peninsular used to be Japonic in ancient times. Proto-Korean speakers are from Manchuria.

    • @user-tj7su4it8l
      @user-tj7su4it8l Рік тому +27

      @@yo2trader539 Wrong theory. The theory is not accepted even in Japanese historical circles.

    • @StarKnyan
      @StarKnyan Рік тому +4

      ​​​@@yo2trader539 고대에 일본이었던 것이 아닌 고대에 현대의 일본어와 같은 계통의 언어를 사용했을 것이라 추정됩니다. 역사서에서 이 한반도 남부의 사람들은 북부의 한국인과 독립적인 존재였던 것으로 묘사됩니다. (중국 고대 역사서에, 고조선이 한반도 남부와 중계 무역을 했다는 자료가 있습니다.)
      그러나 완벽하게 독립적이지 못했고 한반도 북부의 영향권 아래에 놓여져 있었던 것으로 추정됩니다. 한반도 남부에서 한반도 북부 지배자들이 사용했던 제례 도구들이 확인됩니다.
      한반도 남부와 한반도 북부의 사람들은 상당히 특색이 달랐습니다. 중국과 한국의 고대 역사서에서는 고조선 멸망 후 이들을 예맥과 한으로 구분하고 있습니다. 그러나 이 시기의 '한'은 한반도 북부의 사람들과 같은 민족 정체성을 지녔다. 한반도 북부와 남부가 서로 다른 정체성을 지녔던 것은 고조선의 이전.
      한반도 고대 국가들은 예맥과 한으로 나뉘는데 이들은 서로 다른 문화적 특징을 지녔고 그 기원이 서로 다르다고 믿었지만, 한편으로는 서로를 같은 민족으로 인식했다. 그들은 서로의 국가에 유사성을 느꼈으며 삼국시대에는 서로를 '정복의 대상'이 아닌 '통일의 대상'으로 인지하였다. 이것은 그들이 서로를 완전히 다른 민족이 아닌 같은 민족으로 인식하였음을 뒷받침한다.
      한반도 북부의 사람들이 남부로 이주하며 이들은 밀려나거나 한반도에 남아 한반도 북부인과 동화되었다. 밀려난 사람들은 일본으로 넘어가 도래인이 되었다. 남은 사람들은 10세기까지도 완전히 동화되지 않고 있던 것으로 추정된다. 그러나 이들은 한국인과 개별적인 민족 의식을 가지고 있지는 않았다.
      이러한 학설은 일본과 한국 양국에서 모두 적극적으로 받아들여지진 않지만 해외에선 어느정도 연구가 진척되었다.
      특히 학자가 아닌 대부분의 일반 민중들은 이 학설을 받아들이길 꺼린다.
      한국에서는 '한반도 남부의 원래 주인은 일본인'이라고 오해될 수 있기 때문에,
      일본에서는 '일본 국민은 원래 한국인'이라고 오해될 수 있기 때문이다.

    • @AmoebaCulture
      @AmoebaCulture Рік тому

      @@yo2trader539 lol, the internet is full of bullshit isnt it?

    • @user-kb2ju9rf9c
      @user-kb2ju9rf9c Рік тому

      @@yo2trader539 미국이 현재 영국보다 크다고 해서 미국이 원조가 아니듯, 일본이 지금 한국 보다 강하다고 해서 일본이 한반도를 지배했다는 내용은 사실이 아니다, 고대 대륙(현재 중국과 만주지역)에서 여러 민족들이 전쟁을 하고 경쟁할때, 섬나라인 일본은 고립되고 발전이 늣어졌다. 인구의 기초가 되는 벼농사 부터 , 군사력의 척도가 되는 철기 다루는 법 까지 한반도를 거쳐서 넘어갔고, 많은 한국인 이민자들이 건너가 일본을 건국하는데 도움을 주었다, 1560~80년대 , 오다 노부나가와 토요토미 히데요시가 일본 전국을 통일하기 까지 일본은 개별적인 봉건제인데 반해, 한반도는 삼국시대 (AD 50~640) 부터 중앙정부가 지방관을 파견하는 중앙 집권적인 나라였다. 일본의 해적들이 한반도 남부와 중국 남부에 해적질을 쑽하게 벌인 일을 점령해서 다스렸다라는 개념으로 이야기하면 안된다.

  • @leebenworld
    @leebenworld 4 роки тому +1

    Very good analysis. 잘 분석해 주셔서 감사합니다. ♡♡♡

  • @user-ps2sk5vy3j
    @user-ps2sk5vy3j 5 років тому +122

    This is the first time i saw the video that compares two languages, but i confidently ensure as a Korean that this clip is one of the most well-made videos comparing two languages.Not only contents but also the structure is organized very perfectly and well. The explanation is so easy to understand that the whole contents could be fully absorbed. Furthermore,both the pronunciation and speed was easy to follow it was a fun time to see your clip! x) Thanks!

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  5 років тому +19

      Thank you! I’m glad you liked it! I hope I have some other videos you find interesting too. 👍🙂

    • @goingon99
      @goingon99 5 років тому +9

      @@Langfocus I am a native Korean speaker and quite fluent in Japanese. This is the best video/material comparing the two languages to the public audience so far.

  • @deekshabaluni.0184
    @deekshabaluni.0184 6 років тому +28

    Awsome...you explained very well...👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @blackspace007
    @blackspace007 Рік тому +3

    Very good video. Great job. I always thought that phonetically without any understanding of either language, they sound similar to the ear. The way the words and sentences end are a dead give away.

  • @deboralopes6799
    @deboralopes6799 4 роки тому +1

    Such a great video! Thank you!

  • @95bekirable
    @95bekirable 7 років тому +610

    Korean writing system is definetly a great motivation to learn Korean rather than Japanese or Chinese. Sejong was a wise man for sure.

    • @younggypaik8927
      @younggypaik8927 6 років тому +27

      İsmail Çelik My opinion is that both China and Japan would receive immense benefits from adopting Hangup as their writing system. It is not that they abadon their own writing system, but adopting Hangul as their primary tool for writing to rid their inefficiency.

    • @eruno_
      @eruno_ 6 років тому +51

      @Blue Lights
      Japanese needs Kanji, because without it too many words are spoken the same way but mean different things

    • @younggypaik8927
      @younggypaik8927 6 років тому +17

      コイノ/ Koino Kanji has very distinctive look. Without them, Japanese people would have tough time to be able to read and understand quickly. The other benefit of Kanji is that it provides various meaning in few characters taking little spaces in sentences that are already taking wide spaces with Katakana making sentences longer. For Korean, the dependecy on Kanji is less. For the most part, people can get away withnot using them, but when thing get complicated to convey meaning in right way, Kanji would be provided.

    • @younggypaik8927
      @younggypaik8927 6 років тому +7

      Wet Sponge You are right. Korean writing system was invented in 16c. Before and still after that Chinese writing had been adopted, but as Korean writing system gained momentum getting popular for easy of use bypassing the much efforts were needed to learn time consuming Chinese character, nowadays the necessity to learn has been much lessened. However, due to the fact that 50% of the vocaburaries loanerwords from Chinese, it helps to learn Chinese a little bit. Learning to write Korean is worth spending time for it take a very little time to master it, but learning the language is a different thing with much grammar and etc.

    • @younggypaik8927
      @younggypaik8927 6 років тому +2

      Jacky Chew Prof. Reischauer mentioned that people from SE Asia also migrated to the islands as seen in their wearing Fondoshi and shoddy constructions that are seen in tropical region, which he claims that as rather uncharastical elements found in the islands' climate.

  • @hjtv3791
    @hjtv3791 5 років тому +120

    Your Korean pronunciation is pretty good. Thank you for making a good video. I am a Korean and I am a beginner level of Japanese. Your video is very interesting.

  • @ChrisDragon531
    @ChrisDragon531 Рік тому +1

    This was really interesting to watch! I can speak, read (well at a Japanese 2nd grader level, I'm still studying kanji), and understand Japanese and I know a few phrases in Korean. It's so fascinating to watch these two languages side by side and seeing their similarities and differences..

  • @dhseo9379
    @dhseo9379 3 роки тому +69

    *shows N.Korean flag*
    S.Koreans : well yes but actually no

    • @H4n_uL
      @H4n_uL 3 роки тому

      UA-cam: 0:03
      Me: wat dah FAAAAAAAAAAA

    • @riskest
      @riskest 3 роки тому

      Correct.

  • @MrPipvampire
    @MrPipvampire 8 років тому +80

    I lived and worked in Korea and it was the best place ever. I learnt how to read Han-Gul in a day, It was that easy,,, Speaking was not easy at all. However, I could order things in shops,markets and restaurants, Further more I could instruct a taxi chauffeur to get to places around Daegu, the town I lived in at the time.
    l iove Korea.

    • @avito-_
      @avito-_ 5 років тому +3

      Come and visit Daegu again. but not in summer

    • @cHAeEun1002
      @cHAeEun1002 5 років тому +2

      This is such a sweet comment!

  • @jyd1384
    @jyd1384 5 років тому +20

    Dude, your video was so amazing. Let me put it bluntly, your comparison of these two languages, it's so to speak "totally scientific" in my personal eyes. If it had been for your sharpness sight and good capacity for language analysis, I would have been a great lingual expert in my life. But I couldn't do that. :D Man, you're awesome.

  • @jh-nl8yf
    @jh-nl8yf Рік тому +2

    your videos are amazing. well searched, very informational and accurate enough!

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Рік тому

      Thank you! Are you Korean or Japanese?

    • @jh-nl8yf
      @jh-nl8yf Рік тому

      @@Langfocus i'm korean with only small knowledge in Japanese ^^

  • @DavidSaintOnge2007
    @DavidSaintOnge2007 4 роки тому +7

    Very.
    impressive.
    It warms my heart to see you studying Asian languages too. They are so different from the European languages. You’re doing well

  • @alexanderham2492
    @alexanderham2492 5 років тому +10

    This video is very helpful to me. I really interested in Japanese and Korean languages because I can speak Korean and little Japanese. When I speak Japanese, I really confused my pronunciation especially similar pronunciation words. This video give me a answer, why I confus my pronunciation. I really appreciate this video. Thank you!

  • @gary97keren
    @gary97keren 5 років тому +833

    so basically while koreans decided to simplify chinese writing system japanese decided to make it more complicated lol

    • @user-lw8nb8ln1y
      @user-lw8nb8ln1y 5 років тому +15

      haha

    • @cbrtdgh4210
      @cbrtdgh4210 5 років тому +65

      Japanese has many simplified Chinese characters (vs traditional characters used in Taiwan/HK or Korean newspapers a few decades back), so there was actually a conscious attempt to simplify it, at least a little. There are some disadvantages in reading comprehension to completely removing Hanja/Kanji, assuming that the reader is educated in Hanja/Kanji.

    • @fikriirshade1132
      @fikriirshade1132 5 років тому +169

      korean: damn its complicated lets just change it to hangul
      japanese: how about we two more writing system to an already complicated one

    • @Forgeries
      @Forgeries 5 років тому +20

      Korean papers sometimes use chinese characters and you have to learn them

    • @halohalo576
      @halohalo576 5 років тому +48

      @@Forgeries not really.. Maybe in like 40yrs past from now? It's same in North Korea too

  • @soweli3033
    @soweli3033 Рік тому +1

    Very nice sr, it was very interesting to watch and very informative 😀

  • @jameso4053
    @jameso4053 7 місяців тому +5

    As a Korean, you explained so well.😊 And your Korean pronunciation is good enough. Actually, I was kind of surprised at your pronunciation. Seriously, That was great.

  • @user-fu5mx6ot5f
    @user-fu5mx6ot5f 5 років тому +377

    와 이분 일본어랑 한국어 공부 좀 많이 하셨네요. 통찰이 정확합니다. 일본어와 한국어는 문법적 구조나 조사의 사용 등이 매우 유사하죠. 한자어를 공통으로 사용하기 때문에 발음이 비슷한 단어도 굉장히 많습니다.

    • @gmvisck
      @gmvisck 4 роки тому +27

      근데 반말하고 존댓말은 구별 잘 못하는듯..ㅋㅋㅋ

    • @user-tq2xn9mt4n
      @user-tq2xn9mt4n 4 роки тому +3

      @@gmvisck 반존대전법!

    • @anomienormie8126
      @anomienormie8126 4 роки тому +5

      언어학자시니까 ㅋㅋ

    • @frarotu6750
      @frarotu6750 4 роки тому +4

      何について話してるの??

    • @yoonsoopark4076
      @yoonsoopark4076 4 роки тому +5

      한자어가 아니라 한문..

  • @leonardomoraes6505
    @leonardomoraes6505 8 років тому +364

    hotto dogu

    • @NathyIsabella
      @NathyIsabella 8 років тому +39

      hanbaagaa 🍔
      lol

    • @axelNodvon2047
      @axelNodvon2047 8 років тому

      +Leonardo Moraes HOTTO DOGU

    • @peacefulsoul8612
      @peacefulsoul8612 8 років тому +1

      I don't why im cracking up on this 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @DHShin-wn4wr
      @DHShin-wn4wr 8 років тому

      +Nathália Isabella so pretty

    • @mynamebestname
      @mynamebestname 8 років тому +1

      +Leonardo Moraes hotto dogu! vely nice plice.

  • @bananascannotfly2896
    @bananascannotfly2896 9 місяців тому

    Thank you for the great video. I loved how it was concise and easy to understand!
    I speak english and japanese, and started learning korean this month.
    from the comments, sounds like korean speakers find it easier to pick up japanese. Gonna hope the other way also is easy.

  • @user-eg8ym5ok8h
    @user-eg8ym5ok8h 4 роки тому

    Langfocus님 감사합니다!

  • @user-jc7hp5qx2h
    @user-jc7hp5qx2h 7 років тому +878

    l like korea and japan

    • @user-bo7jl1gv9g
      @user-bo7jl1gv9g 7 років тому +61

      same here

    • @user-jc7hp5qx2h
      @user-jc7hp5qx2h 7 років тому +57

      i like japan!!

    • @horrorpill
      @horrorpill 7 років тому +48

      Japan is my favorite so far, very polite people.

    • @harakiri7995
      @harakiri7995 7 років тому +24

      중일평화 韓中日平和 한 i like trains

    • @junkiryu2691
      @junkiryu2691 7 років тому +32

      Your name is very interesting ;-)

  • @josiper6662
    @josiper6662 5 років тому +92

    I'm a native speaker of Korean and English (I'm from a mixed background). I was born in Korea, and lived there until I was 9, then moved to Scotland. I'm 16 now, I regularly use Korean at home to speak with my mum and sister, but I haven't been to Korea in 7 years, so unfortunately my Korean isn't up to par anymore. However, I think this played to my advantage, because one day I was going through random UA-cam videos, and I came across a past TV show. My speaker's volumes were low, so initially I assumed that the language I heard was Korean, although I was unsure why I couldn't understand it. When I turned the volume up, it was quite apparent that it was Japanese, which was a huge surprise. I looked into Japanese a bit, and I was pleasantly surprised at how similar it was to Korean. I might try learning it in the future, but first I'm going to focus on improving my Korean.

    • @BY-sh6gt
      @BY-sh6gt 4 роки тому +3

      Man the same thing happened to me when i was a kid 😂 i thought it was Japanese, but it turned out to be Korean since i noticed there are more vowels when they spoke

  • @zyrob3435
    @zyrob3435 Рік тому +78

    I speak Mandarin Chinese, studied Japanese up to around N2 level, then learnt Korean (currently around TOPIK Level 4-5 level). It was a breeze learning Korean because most of the higher-level vocabulary come from Chinese words and have similar/relatable pronunciation, the grammar structures are so similar to Japanese, and the honorific system in Korean is much easier to master than Japanese in my opinion.

  • @milkoohun
    @milkoohun 4 роки тому

    im learning both of them and knowing some things of one and others of the other one made me understand a lot of things i didnt understand and im-- so grateful

  • @timbowman57
    @timbowman57 5 років тому +11

    Interesting piece; I studied Korean and I often travel there. Koreans in the south still use the hanja in newspapers, official documents, and in much of their scholarly work. You will also see it on television shows used to describe something or for a name to ensure precise identification.

  • @rhinseout
    @rhinseout 6 років тому +175

    As a native Japanese speaker, I have to say this was an extremely clear elucidation. Nice one!

  • @PeterMasalski93
    @PeterMasalski93 2 роки тому +7

    After having lived many years in mainland China and Japan and taking both my HSk5 and JLPT 3... I went for a trip to korea. I did a small course and noticed alot of similarities.. so i simply googled japanese vs korean and there i found you..
    all my suspicions were correct.. thx for confirming it.. I just saved myself 50hours of learning korean..

  • @act8137
    @act8137 2 роки тому +1

    perfect explanation. thanks!!

  • @a2rhombus2
    @a2rhombus2 8 років тому +25

    When you were going over the sentences with the colored words in order to explain the meaning of each one individually, it really helped me to understand the grammar, so great job. I have been trying to learn japanese but the grammar is so different from english that it has proved very difficult, but in this video the way you explained it was pretty easy to understand. Do you know of any service that uses the same or a similar method to teach japanese grammar? It would really help. Also if you have any other tips on learning the language in general it would be appreciated.

    • @KapengBarakoTheReal
      @KapengBarakoTheReal 8 років тому

      +A to Rhombus Try Japanese in 5.

    • @Paulosantana2k
      @Paulosantana2k 8 років тому

      try pimsleur

    • @clebfelm4170
      @clebfelm4170 8 років тому

      +A to Rhombus do you live in japan?

    • @a2rhombus2
      @a2rhombus2 8 років тому

      Cleb Felm
      No lol, I live in america

    • @clebfelm4170
      @clebfelm4170 8 років тому +2

      +A to Rhombus lmao wowwww. true weeb. You can't even speak to Japanese people in person, wtf is the point 😆

  • @seoyooncho1052
    @seoyooncho1052 5 років тому +154

    띄어쓰기의 중요성
    Importance of spacing words
    내동 생고기
    Nae-dong raw meat (Nae-dong is the city’s name)
    내동생고기
    My brother’s flesh

  • @Anna-mc3ll
    @Anna-mc3ll 3 роки тому

    Many thanks for this interesting information!

  • @Macolicious88
    @Macolicious88 4 роки тому

    Love your videos!!! Please keep it up man!

  • @user-ly4eb4gh2h
    @user-ly4eb4gh2h 5 років тому +22

    일본사람이에요.나는 한국어를 공부하고 있어요. 한국어는 아주 어려워요.하지만 한국의 한자어는 닮고 쉬워요.

  • @Araresembei
    @Araresembei 6 років тому +33

    日本語と韓国語の文法は似ているから、日本人にとってとても勉強がしやすい。

    • @T8kazamajunLabo
      @T8kazamajunLabo 5 років тому +9

      韓国人にも日本語を習いやすいです、アニメを見てきただけで日本語で簡単な対話が可能でです w

    • @user-vv4gp8hc5d
      @user-vv4gp8hc5d 5 років тому +9

      @@T8kazamajunLabo 韓国と日本仲良くなれたらいいね👍♡

    • @lichtundwasser9044
      @lichtundwasser9044 5 років тому

      Please let me know what you mean in English.

    • @user-uo1kf1hh5o
      @user-uo1kf1hh5o 5 років тому

      @@lichtundwasser9044 a little bit racism

    • @Herobrine0425
      @Herobrine0425 5 років тому

      한영민 왜요 그냥 물어본 것 같은데ㅜ

  • @krobbyzw
    @krobbyzw 3 місяці тому

    Love your work, thank you Paul 🫡

  • @rococo5196
    @rococo5196 4 роки тому +6

    너무 흥미로운 주제네요 한국어자막덕분에 잘 봤습니다

  • @nayutaito9421
    @nayutaito9421 8 років тому +21

    I am a native Japanese speaker who doesn't understand Korean. I think most of Japanese people can only identify Korean by "NIDA" in the end of Korean sentences.

    • @taewook6447
      @taewook6447 8 років тому +2

      Koreans don't even use "nida" when they're speaking casually..

    • @Eunoialagom
      @Eunoialagom 8 років тому +1

      An Indian living in Busan...I can differentiate between both Korean and Japanese by the style :D

    • @KoreanSentry
      @KoreanSentry 8 років тому

      That's being ignorant, all I hear from Japanese is detsu. LMAO

    • @TheColblas
      @TheColblas 8 років тому +1

      it is -습니다 (-seubnida, after a consonant) -ㅂ니다 (bnida, after a vowel) the "b" is pronounced as a "m" tho because of the following "n". It is the formal way of saying "is" iirc

    • @daslkwoidl
      @daslkwoidl 7 років тому +1

      한국인들한텐 한국인들이 데스 데스네 하면서 공중파에서 일본인흉내는건 칭찬으로 들리나봄

  • @K-electronic
    @K-electronic 5 років тому +27

    I’m Korean. So I found a fact you didn’t explained. Both Japanese and Korean have a polite expression.

    • @stevebeave9252
      @stevebeave9252 3 роки тому

      Opinions

    • @yjs3639
      @yjs3639 3 роки тому +6

      @@stevebeave9252 I think he was talking about honorifics.

    • @imagine_8681
      @imagine_8681 2 роки тому +1

      Korean copied Japanese u mean

    • @stevebeave9252
      @stevebeave9252 2 роки тому +1

      @@imagine_8681 where did the Japanese come from probably korea

    • @K-electronic
      @K-electronic 2 роки тому

      @@imagine_8681 ? than did english copied latin? I don't know how language can 'copy' others. your words are useless you know?

  • @linpires
    @linpires 4 роки тому +6

    Esse cara é muito bom! (This guy is great!)

  • @michaelshort2388
    @michaelshort2388 3 роки тому +79

    Korean is easy to get started in, on account of the writing system being really easy, but it gets more difficult because of the phonetics of the language. Japanese is quite difficult to get started in because of how hard the writing system is to learn but gets easier because of the phonetics. :)

  • @aldekorea
    @aldekorea 8 років тому +5

    Very accurate explanation!

  • @FrigglyFluff
    @FrigglyFluff 5 років тому +7

    I’m studying Japanese and I’ve always been so curious about this, thank you! I plan on learning Korean in a few years as well and this made me feel so much better haha. No more kanji!!! 😭

  • @n124ac9
    @n124ac9 2 роки тому +24

    Similarities:
    Both have SOV word order
    Both have topic/subject/object markers
    Both have politeness conjugation
    Both were influenced by Chinese
    Both were written in Chinese characters with additional phonetic characters for writing grammatical inflection

  • @rvprksh
    @rvprksh 3 роки тому

    Very helpful video, Thanks.

  • @Mr2Reviews
    @Mr2Reviews 6 років тому +115

    I'm Korean-American but my Korean is not fluent. I also watch a lot of anime using English subtitles and every now and then, I'll hear some words that sound similar or exactly the same in Korean, for example...
    Japanese: Anzen (safe)
    Korean: Ahnjeon 안전 (safe)
    Japanese: Joonbi (prepare)
    Korean: Joonbi 준비 (prepare)
    Japanese: Kazoku (family)
    Korean: Gajohk 가족 (family)
    Japanese: Dochaku (arrive)
    Korean: Dochak 도착 (arrive)
    Japanese: Keisan (calculation)
    Korean: Gyesan 계산 (calculation)
    Japanese: Ryori (cook)
    Korean: Yori 요리 (cook)
    Japanese: Kiboon (feeling)
    Korean: Giboon 기분 (feeling)
    Japanese: Kantan (easy)
    Korean: Gandan 간단 (easy)
    Japanese: Arubaito (part time job)
    Korean: Areubaiteu 아르바이트 (part time job)
    Japanese: Shoujiki (honestly)
    Korean: Soljiki 솔직히 (honestly)
    Japanese: Jikan (time)
    Korean: Shigan 시간 (time)
    Japanese: Shinbun (newspaper)
    Korean: Shinmun 신문 (newspaper)

    • @kenlau135
      @kenlau135 6 років тому +17

      all of these words are not native to the two languages. thay are all loanwords from chian

    • @hitler69
      @hitler69 5 років тому +1

      WRONG!
      eg. 気分 (ki-bun)(feeling) is a totally japanese invention.

    • @kenlau135
      @kenlau135 5 років тому +7

      Those words are invented by Japanese in CHINESE morphology. If they are in Japanese, they should be words like サポる ビビる where there is suffix

    • @sbyun9739
      @sbyun9739 5 років тому +8

      kenlau135 Arbeit is from German though..

    • @zhengliu9804
      @zhengliu9804 5 років тому +3

      Followings are the Mandarin pronunciation, by orderly:
      Anquan
      Zhunbei
      Jiating(in many dialects pronuce Ga )
      Daoda
      Jisuan
      Liaoli
      Qifen
      Shouxin
      Shijian
      Xinwen
      Only the partime job one in Chinsese pronunces very differently

  • @beregu
    @beregu 6 років тому +186

    I studied both Japanese and Korean, and I am a Mongolian native speaker. Grammatically all three languages are so similar. It really didn’t take much to understand and feel the structures and the uses of sentence orders, suffixes and etc. for me. All I had to do was learning vocabulary and speak.
    Learning to write and read in Japanese is so hard. I just gave up after learning the basic 2000 characters. 2000 is not enough to fluently communicate.
    I love Korean writing system. So simple and effective. It took me about an hour to memorize all the alphabets. For full scale correct reading and writing, it would require to learn words and some specific Korean language features. I would say it’s a perfect writing system fit for Korean language; and anyone who is thinking about creating own script/writing system should have a look.
    My Kazakh friends say Mongolian and Kazakh languages are very similar too.

    • @frechjo
      @frechjo 6 років тому +5

      I saw somewhere the hypothesis that Hangul was inspired by 'Phags-pa, that beautiful Mongolian ancient script.
      They share the characteristic of relating shape to sound, and they also share a few shapes for the same sounds.
      That connection could have been hidden for political reasons, or it could have never existed. In any case, it's interesting either way.
      I wish I could use any of them (or Devanagari) in Spanish... Maybe I will ;)

    • @hopelee3286
      @hopelee3286 6 років тому +1

      Im on the same boat as you are currently in. Im a Korean and currently studying Japanese, and also having massive hard time on kanjis.. they say you have to learn atleast 6000~8000 kanjis to be an average person in Japan.. and Im here struggling with few hundreds already..

    • @lissandrafreljord7913
      @lissandrafreljord7913 6 років тому +3

      I thought Kazakh was closely related to Kyrgyz.

    • @mongolchiuud8931
      @mongolchiuud8931 6 років тому +4

      Both Kazakh and Kyrghiz are Kichak turkic languages.

    • @cygnus5156
      @cygnus5156 6 років тому

      이소망 도와줄게 날 페북 추가

  • @sanchez2892
    @sanchez2892 4 роки тому +21

    You're so smart dude, thank you for these videos.

  • @khp3137
    @khp3137 Рік тому +3

    I'm a Kroean studying Japanese. It's so fun learning another language. Kanji is so difficult but there are some Kanji s that I already knew even before I learned Japanese, is really helpful.

  • @skyjacket10
    @skyjacket10 5 років тому +12

    Great! i am a Korean and I think your explanation of Korean and Japanese language is very good. Besides, your Korean pronunciation is pretty good. 감사합니다.

  • @junkoi1092
    @junkoi1092 7 років тому +315

    I am Japanese learning Korean. The more I learn Korean, the more similarities I find between the two languages. Not only grammar and syntax are similar, expressions are also very similar (or the same, I would say..). You said in the video that the vocabulary is remarkably different, but I disagree. Actually the vocabulary is very very similar. It is, however, not due to the Chinese loanwords, I would say. I don't know much about the history of languages, so I cannot say definitely, but Korean and Japanese share lots of 漢字語(한자어), which can be translated as Chinese character words, but actually those Chinese words did NOT come directly from China. I guess many of them had been developed by either Korean or Japanese, using Chinese letters and combining them into words. For example, insomnia in Japanese is 不眠症 and 불면증 in Korean. Now they don't use Chinese characters in Korea, but there used to be Chinese characters for 불면증. If you put them back in Chinese characters, then it becomes exactly 不眠症. But in Chinese itself the word is 失眠, so it is a different word. Japanese and Korean share the same word, but not Chinese. ...and there are so many of words like this.. Now as you noted, the pronunciation is pretty different between Korean and Japanese, so it's hard for Japanese to catch Korean words, and vice versa. However there is a pretty consistent sound conversion rule between Korean character and Japanese character. 不(fu) is 불(pul) and 眠(min) is 면(myoun) and 症(sho) is 증(jyun) etc, and once you master the rule, you can pretty comfortably convert back and forth between Korean and Japanese. So whenever I read/listen to Korean, I try to find 漢字語(한자어=Chinese character words) in it using the sound conversion rule, and once I am successful, I can know the meaning right away, since the chances are it is the same word we use in Japanese. On top of this, the grammar, syntax and expressions are similar, so it is like learning a dialect, not a foreign language (I don't mean Korean is a dialect of Japanese, Korean people can say Japanese is a dialect of theirs!).

    • @koreanleague2918
      @koreanleague2918 7 років тому +16

      the vocabulary and the morphology of proto-japanese and proto-korean are very different. you would not understand anything if you compare the proto-languages.
      but over time and with big influence the languages get more similar, + the chinese influence.
      so it the morphology of japanese similar to southeast-asian languages and not similar to korean.
      and proto-korean morphology is not similar to any living languages. some similariteis are found with the isolated nivkh language.
      but it still is japanese and korean are isolated, from all language of world korean and japanese are today the most similar compared to other non related languages. but there origin is today isolated. only some linguists say that japanese is related to a proto-austronesian/polynesian family

    • @user-cr3pn7rk2v
      @user-cr3pn7rk2v 7 років тому +6

      Junko I
      Is it possible influence from colonial times?

    • @pepethefrog1151
      @pepethefrog1151 7 років тому +22

      some of the korean words are actually from the japanese language (during japanese imperialism)

    • @cyber1991
      @cyber1991 7 років тому +1

      Someone wrote exactly what you said
      www.quora.com/Where-did-the-Japanese-people-originate-from/answer/Alex-Wong-254

    • @user-lb4ho3oy1c
      @user-lb4ho3oy1c 7 років тому +1

      Woosuk Lee but we think it's slang(bad word) cuz it's from japan when 2nd world war

  • @SaintNomad
    @SaintNomad 4 роки тому

    great comparison vid!!

  • @AzureUnagi
    @AzureUnagi 4 роки тому +4

    Well, I think it would be much more interesting if you will introduce on this channel about the simmilarity between the Gugyeol(구결) and Kana system, both of which had/have been used as phonetic symbols by loaning chinese characters that have similar sound.

  • @RoScFan
    @RoScFan 8 років тому +195

    I like the korean system of writing more.

    • @MingJianYap
      @MingJianYap 8 років тому +3

      someone invented Nihon no Hangul. yes. blasphemous to Japanese

    • @TheHollowBodiesBand
      @TheHollowBodiesBand 8 років тому

      is not that bad xD

    • @jhkim8510
      @jhkim8510 8 років тому +6

      haha Excuse you ! I hate to trouble it. What the hell are you doing on my country flag back off! I warn you of putting flipping image you use on youtube profile picture!'
      Plus, where I am here we learned, Japanese ancient letters are debunked and faked.

    • @KoreanSentry
      @KoreanSentry 8 років тому +9

      Fyi, There's ancient Korean characters called Idu Hyangchal, Gugyeol. Japanese Kana scripts aren't Japanese invention but actually originated from ancient Korea. There's new study being conducted by both Korea & Japan on this after oldest written texts in kana script had hidden Idu symbol next to it. So there you go, go & learn something new every day.

    • @KoreanSentry
      @KoreanSentry 7 років тому

      ***** Really? so tat means even Katagana/Hiragana are all Chinese then. How come Chinese don't use these Chinese script anymore? why roman alphabet?

  • @SionnachMacSionnaigh
    @SionnachMacSionnaigh 5 років тому +80

    5:54 "ma-eul" had been pronounced as "mozolh" in Middle Korean. 6:10 "wi-ei" had been "wuh" in Middle Korean, which recoded as Old Korean "oko", and "u-e" had been pronouced "upe", from Proto-Japonic "*upai". 6:21 Korean "e" had been pronounced "ey" in Middle Korean, and Japanese "e" had been pronounced "pye" in Old Japanese. 6:25 Both of Korean and Japanese subect markers "ga" are developed from genitive particles independently. As going older forms, they go more far aparted. Those words may not be relatives.

    • @guicho271828
      @guicho271828 Рік тому +1

      Jp "ga" is actually a nasal voice "nga" too. (Tokyo dialect)

    • @user-nf3kz9ee2n
      @user-nf3kz9ee2n Рік тому

      Yeah, they kinda converged in some ways

  • @lalalari8078
    @lalalari8078 3 роки тому +82

    I was listening to K Pop Music. They have two versions of the songs, each Song is recorded in Japanese and in Korean.
    Took me 2 Months to realise that I was listening to the japanese Version of some songs😂

    • @3xperiment8
      @3xperiment8 2 роки тому +2

      LOL

    • @3xperiment8
      @3xperiment8 2 роки тому +5

      It's the same when I download a chinese movie. I never know if I downloaded the original cantonese audio or I'm watching a mandarim dub

  • @elaineycho
    @elaineycho Рік тому +6

    i have a very basic level mastery of korean because i grew up speaking konglish in the home. when i was in high school, i took japanese and excelled at it because the grammar was so similar to korean that it just clicked. oddly enough, it is harder for me to read and write korean because, like in english, the letters/characters pronunciation can change based on the placement of consonants like the L sound followed by the N character turns the N into a long L... whereas kanji is read phonetically. other similar words are grape and newspaper. in korean grape is pronounce podo, in japanese it is budo. newspaper is shinmoon in korean and shinbun. i am taking an adult korean language class right now and there is a japanese student who is near fluent. the only issue is the pronunciation because she cannot do the final consonant sound. but it is awesome to see how quickly she picked it up because of the grammatical connection.
    anyway, thank you for sharing this

  • @susoo4116
    @susoo4116 5 років тому +30

    As a Chinese who learned Korean, I’m so appreciate that this video helped me out of understanding the structures of Japanese.

  • @jorgeotolio
    @jorgeotolio 8 років тому +7

    I learned to read Korean in less than one hour (I mean the basics). I found the signs very logical, and the couple I could not figure out, I was taught by a Korean student. I love it :)

  • @theSshow
    @theSshow 2 роки тому +1

    Great video!

  • @SayaRabbitholeSimp
    @SayaRabbitholeSimp 2 роки тому +2

    I have been learning the Korean Language for 6 months. At first before I learned it seriously, learning the vocabulary was easy and I thought the grammar would be very difficult but I struggle to memorise the vocabulary since I am lazy but even though the grammar system is quite foreign to me, it is quite simple and clear

  • @albb0920
    @albb0920 8 років тому +21

    Pro tip: You only need to learn one of them, Google Translate can translate between them almost perfectly.
    I learned Japanese, because I'm Taiwanese so I can already read Kanji, and I can use Google translate to read most Korean websites after translate them into Japanese.

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  8 років тому +10

      +albb0920 Yeah, that`s thanks to the similar syntax and grammar. But translating between English and either one of them! LOLs all around! :D

    • @martinicc67
      @martinicc67 8 років тому

      +albb0920 Thanks for the advice.

    • @KingofKpop
      @KingofKpop 8 років тому +1

      +albb0920 It's very easy to translate because Japanese & Korean have similar structure and you know Chinese words, so you can kind of guess it.

    • @RolitabunTV
      @RolitabunTV 8 років тому +1

      +albb0920 thanks for that, you can see bunch of nationalists from both country fight each others without linguistic barrier in every websites.

    • @mrsnazri2004
      @mrsnazri2004 8 років тому

      Google translate is not accurate

  • @YanaSarkar
    @YanaSarkar 6 років тому +7

    I love this video! I studied a little bit of Japanese at my high school club before switching over to Korea (for reasons that it was easier to self study since I didn't need to learn 2000 kanji and also there was more access to Korean speakers than Japanese speakers in my city), but those two language can definitely be translated word for word in most cases ^^

  • @marika_nikki
    @marika_nikki Рік тому

    오우 감사합니다! 흥미로운 영상이였어요! ^^