oh. you are very clever! this lecture makes sense and is so correct,scientific! as korean i'll give you some tips(references,usages). ~아요,~해요 :present tense, mostly used when first meet in informal situation before using 반말(친해지기 전). as you know, koreans usually use 존댓말 when each other meet first time. ~어요 : used like ~아요,~해요 PLUS young people USUALLY use in informal situation with older people who are NOT stranger(e.g. parents,teacher,parent) kind of 존댓말(high respect)). BTW 장유유서 is great part of korean culture. 장유유서 which is coming from confucious LITERALLY means there's rule between young and old people. (장=long 유=young 유=is 서=in order,rule) historically, ancient korea follow ancient china's philosophy and it remains SO FAR. that's why korean language has two system(존댓말, 반말) :)
I think Her Korean pronunciation is really good , Usually English speakers who learn Korean, speak Korean like English for example, '놀다' She Pronunciated exactly However, Non-koreans speak like Lolda or Rolda , but It has to be rolling the tongue slightly. It is kind of like.. '라' is not like the sound 'La' or 'Ra' Of course, For us , It doesnt matter to understand how you guys pronunciate it , But if you guys want to speak Korean like real Koreans , I really recommend this vedio .
Your videos are wonderful! It is joyful to watch a smart girl like you trying to learn a completely unfamiliar culture and language with such an enthusiasm. as a Korean struggling to get higher score on TOEFL, I admire your enthusiasm. I hope you can perfect your study oneday and find yourself successfully utilizing your talent where they are most needed.
I love these videos so much! it really helps me a lot and you make it so easy to understand! I writing down notes from each of your weekly Korean videos in a small book and it's a good way to remember and look over things!!
Dude this is harder than math DX I feel like giving up but I've come a along way and I'm so motivated to learn Korean till I understand Kpop idols in interviews and stuff LOL
I’m so ready for this! I think the more you practice the easier it will get, instead of trying to memorize I should just grab a book of Korean verbs and try to conjugate them and see how the rules apply. Thank you for this video! 고맙습니다!
Thank you! I had the basics, but the diphthongs and other exceptions were giving me trouble. I enjoy your funny ("the strong overpower the weak") explanations--they make things easier to remember.
it's was really useful video so many information.. even i didn't get the last point about 바빠요..but get all the rest of the video..and i looking forward the next one about past tense..and about the background music i really liked it I'm not with background music free but but anyway I'm okay with all ..keep going margreta..😊
지나가다가 우연히 채널 알게 되서 구독하고 가는 한국사람입니다 ㅎ 한국어에 대한 열정도 대단해보이고 진심이 묻어나는 것 같아서 참 보기 좋아보여요 ㅎ 저도 외국인들을 상대할 일이 많아서 가끔 한국어를 알려줘야 할 때 고민이 많은데 영상보면서 어떻게 알려줘야할지 많이 배워갑니다 ㅎ 앞으로도 좋은 영상 많이 올려주시면 고맙겠습니다!
Your pronunciation is very well! (Anyone else like when her phone went off and she didn't answer it?? That's true passion there!) You should be a Hangul teacher! Your lessons are good and easy to follow even to people who are beginners like me! ^^ thank you for making these!~~~
Thank you for explaining this! I just started taking a Korean class at a local university and I don't know if we'll even make it to conjugations before the semester is over. I plan on continuing Korean on my own after the class is over. Your videos will be really helpful (:
*인도에서 안녕하세요!! 여기 십문장, “현재 시제”/“현재 계속 시제”/“현재 완성 시제” 사용 :* *하나위 문장 : 이것이 잘못입니다* *둘위 문장 : 콘서트는 놀라워* *셋위 문장 : 택배는 도착하고 있어요* *넷위 문장 : 비행은 지연합니다* *디섯위 문장 : 내 모두 옷감들이 청소돼* *여섯위 문장 : 이것이 수용되지 않아요* *일홉위 문장 : 저는 수영을 알습니다 (정말)* *여덟위 문장 : 내 방이 청소되고 있어* *아홉위 문장 : 한국 해방일이 여덟월 십다섯일 축하돼* *십위 문장 : 내 작품이 완성돼요* *고맙습니다!!* 🙏🙏😊😊
Can you do a video on Present progressive tense? In the process of doing something (___ing) Conjugations of 고 있어요 or 고 습니다 etc. That seems like it would be more needed for conversations but there are not very many videos on it.
So, with the rule you said about 2 syllable verbs that end with the vowel 으 on the second syllable then we should use the dominate vowel in the first syllable to replace the 으 (your example at 7:03: 바쁘다 becoming 바빠요 , does that mean that a verb such as 모르다 (to not know) would become 모로요?
No. Actually, if the syllable before it has ㅏ or ㅗ it will be both changed into ㅏ. So 모르다 would become 몰라요. However, I-m sorry because now i think you would ask why did I add an extra ㄹ at the end of the first syllable, I don-t know it either. But the important thing is that as you can see the second syllable-s vowel is aㅏ. Hope it help (kind of)
Thank you! I'm glad you brought this to my attention. I researched online and found a page specifically regarding 르 ending words. It seems there is that specific rule for 르 ending words (but with a few exceptions). The general rule is just as you explained. For present tense, drop the 다, add a ㄹ to the bottom of the first syllable and then add 라요. Examples given were 빠르다 (to be fast) into 빨라요. And 모르다 (to not know) into 몰라요. Also for past tense, 빠르다 will be 빨랐어요 and 모르다 will be 몰랐어요. However, the ㅂ니다 endings would not follow this rule. Example, 모르다 would become 모릅니다. Or with 세요 ending. Example, 모르다, which will be 모르세요. It also mentioned that there are some 르 ending words that do not follow the conjugation rule for present tense of adding a ㄹ to the bottom of the first syllable and then adding 라요.. Examples such as 따르다 would become 따라요. Thanks again. It helped a lot!
I didn't see any verb examples with no pat'chim that end with ㅓ. Are there any and how would you conjugate them? Would you just use the 어요 ending the same as when you have a non-pat'chim verb that ends with ㅏ you just use the 아요?
My teacher taught us that it was 아요, 어요, and 여요...with (하) being the only verb stem followed by this. Idk. I was just never taught that 해요 is one of the three 'official' past tense endings.
That's perfectly fine :) Try not to focus on 'rules' and just feel how the language flows and follow your gut. There are lots of ways to organise patterns of conjugation :)
can you help me about "bad-da" which means "to receive"? i'm sorry i cant type korean because i use PC now. from the grammar, i think it must be "bad-ayo", but i found from many korean dramas that koreans sometimes use "bad-eoyo" too. can you explain me that? thanks^^
Hello. This is really confusing me. How do you conjugate the -ing form of Korean verbs? What's the difference from present tense? Can't find any videos of that here in UA-cam. Please help. Thank you.
Present tense in Korean is basically the "ing" form of verbs/adverbs/adjectives. The beautiful thing about Korean is that there aren't as many rules when it comes to conjugating. For example: 먹다= to eat Present tense: 먹어요= I'm eating 먹어자요=let's eat Past tense: 먹었어요=I ate Future tense: 먹을 거예요 = I will (go) eat Hope that made sense. You just have to find the flow of the language and not try to form it in the way you would in your mother language.
I'm kinda confused. You explained greatly, but i'm also studying korean through the howtostudykorean website and it says that you should add 는다 to the stems to conjugate? What should I really do cos I have no idea who's right lmao
Some suggestions i have for your korean, as someone who fluently speaks it and talks like a native, the first thing i noticed was when you say 여러분 you pronounce 분 more like 븐 . :) its more ooo - ish if you know what i mean haha
In it's non-conjugated form, it pretty much just means "to be something" and when it is conjugated it means "it is something". Like 보다 means "to see" and 봐요 means "I see" (or they see, he sees, she sees). I hope this makes sense, but if not, I can try to explain it better if you have questions. ^^
no unlike languages such as French, Korean doesn't really use pronouns as much, you can say for example 나는 좋아해요 (i like) but take off the 나는 and the 좋아해요 would still imply you are saying (i like) I think this is right but I know for a fact for emotions/adjectives that this is the case so it might be the same with verbs - there is no different endings corresponding to pronouns
+Suga Swag 서두르다 becomes 서두르. It ends with a ㅡ so you take the ㅡ away and put the ㅓ 요in it's place. She explains it at 5: 47. Also look at this picture. It helped me learn the present conjuagation. www.koreanfromzero.com/lessons/images/image77.png
Well, grammatically 바쁘 + 어요 = 바빠요 is right, but most of Koreans simply don't care about it. Some of them say 바빠요, and the other say 바뻐요. So well, it depends on the people you meet.
+sarah iman When you want to conjugate a word that ends with ㅡ(a vowel) like in 바쁘다 you delete the 다 and are left with: 바쁘 . Because it ends with a vowel, and the vowel is ㅡ you need to look at the vowel before it. If the vowel before it has a ㅏ or ㅗ then it becomes ㅏ. 바쁘 the vowel before ㅡ is ㅏ. There for you need to change the ㅡ to ㅏ요. 바쁘다>바쁘>바빠요. But if you conjugate a word and it ends with a consonant like in 만들다(to make)>만들. If you look at the last vowel it is ㅡ but the word does not end with it, it ends with a consonant. That's why you use the normal rule. 만들>만들어요. Look at this picture if you didn't understand me: www.koreanfromzero.com/lessons/images/image77.png I hope it helps!
The way you explain things, like "the strong overpowers the weak" is so perfect. I can actually understand perfectly.
thank you :)
oh. you are very clever! this lecture makes sense and is so correct,scientific! as korean i'll give you some tips(references,usages). ~아요,~해요 :present tense, mostly used when first meet in informal situation before using 반말(친해지기 전). as you know, koreans usually use 존댓말 when each other meet first time. ~어요 : used like ~아요,~해요 PLUS young people USUALLY use in informal situation with older people who are NOT stranger(e.g. parents,teacher,parent) kind of 존댓말(high respect)). BTW 장유유서 is great part of korean culture. 장유유서 which is coming from confucious LITERALLY means there's rule between young and old people. (장=long 유=young 유=is 서=in order,rule) historically, ancient korea follow ancient china's philosophy and it remains SO FAR. that's why korean language has two system(존댓말, 반말) :)
I think Her Korean pronunciation is really good , Usually English speakers who learn Korean, speak Korean like English for example, '놀다' She Pronunciated exactly However, Non-koreans speak like Lolda or Rolda , but It has to be rolling the tongue slightly. It is kind of like.. '라' is not like the sound 'La' or 'Ra'
Of course, For us , It doesnt matter to understand how you guys pronunciate it , But if you guys want to speak Korean like real Koreans , I really recommend this vedio .
Your videos are wonderful! It is joyful to watch a smart girl like you trying to learn a completely unfamiliar culture and language with such an enthusiasm. as a Korean struggling to get higher score on TOEFL, I admire your enthusiasm. I hope you can perfect your study oneday and find yourself successfully utilizing your talent where they are most needed.
I love these videos so much! it really helps me a lot and you make it so easy to understand! I writing down notes from each of your weekly Korean videos in a small book and it's a good way to remember and look over things!!
Could you make some worksheets just to practice (for example particles)
+WTFerryGames Try this pictures. It helped me understand this much better.
www.koreanfromzero.com/lessons/images/image77.png
You pronounced 마시다 as 맛있다[마시따] which means delicious. Subtle difference but totally different meaning.
Dude this is harder than math DX I feel like giving up but I've come a along way and I'm so motivated to learn Korean till I understand Kpop idols in interviews and stuff LOL
dont give up!!!!!!
I’m so ready for this! I think the more you practice the easier it will get, instead of trying to memorize I should just grab a book of Korean verbs and try to conjugate them and see how the rules apply. Thank you for this video! 고맙습니다!
I'm not able to go to my class today, so my korean teacher suggested your video and it helped me alot. 감사합니다
This has been really,really helpful! Thank you for this! And all your videos!
wow i have been trying to understand this from other sites and apps but you are the ONLY one that i managed to understand from
She explains so easily. I like that.
Thank you! I had the basics, but the diphthongs and other exceptions were giving me trouble. I enjoy your funny ("the strong overpower the weak") explanations--they make things easier to remember.
This is amazing, thank you so much! I feel like this video has unlocked so much learning possibility for me!
it's was really useful video so many information.. even i didn't get the last point about 바빠요..but get all the rest of the video..and i looking forward the next one about past tense..and about the background music i really liked it I'm not with background music free but but anyway I'm okay with all ..keep going margreta..😊
Honestly so happy to have found this channel. gamsahamnida :)))
Thank you so much!! This helped me a lot! 너무 감사합니다!!
Amazingly easy to comprehend, thank you !:)
Thank you!!! I love your videos:) They help me so much!
reminds me of er ir and ar verbs in spanish. lol
They really help me, and I like the background music to be honest!
지나가다가 우연히 채널 알게 되서 구독하고 가는 한국사람입니다 ㅎ 한국어에 대한 열정도 대단해보이고 진심이 묻어나는 것 같아서 참 보기 좋아보여요 ㅎ 저도 외국인들을 상대할 일이 많아서 가끔 한국어를 알려줘야 할 때 고민이 많은데 영상보면서 어떻게 알려줘야할지 많이 배워갑니다 ㅎ 앞으로도 좋은 영상 많이 올려주시면 고맙겠습니다!
Awesome as always !!!
thank you
설명 정말 좋은것 같아요~~ 응원할게요!!^^
Thank you so much!!!!! i love your teaching lessons
Your pronunciation is very well!
(Anyone else like when her phone went off and she didn't answer it?? That's true passion there!)
You should be a Hangul teacher! Your lessons are good and easy to follow even to people who are beginners like me! ^^ thank you for making these!~~~
you made this very easy to understand, thank you
Thank you so much! This was extremely helpful!
Thank you very much now i understand well how i use them i really was confused
I recently studied the same topic, Good job.
Thanks Margarita❤
Thank you for explaining this! I just started taking a Korean class at a local university and I don't know if we'll even make it to conjugations before the semester is over. I plan on continuing Korean on my own after the class is over. Your videos will be really helpful (:
한국말을 참 잘가르치시네요. 멋져요!
Hi! Thanks for this video! 😊☺ Can you please make a dance cover of Ooh Aah by Twice? 👍👏👏
*인도에서 안녕하세요!! 여기 십문장, “현재 시제”/“현재 계속 시제”/“현재 완성 시제” 사용 :*
*하나위 문장 : 이것이 잘못입니다*
*둘위 문장 : 콘서트는 놀라워*
*셋위 문장 : 택배는 도착하고 있어요*
*넷위 문장 : 비행은 지연합니다*
*디섯위 문장 : 내 모두 옷감들이 청소돼*
*여섯위 문장 : 이것이 수용되지 않아요*
*일홉위 문장 : 저는 수영을 알습니다 (정말)*
*여덟위 문장 : 내 방이 청소되고 있어*
*아홉위 문장 : 한국 해방일이 여덟월 십다섯일 축하돼*
*십위 문장 : 내 작품이 완성돼요*
*고맙습니다!!* 🙏🙏😊😊
THIS IS SO HELPFUL❤️
you are so talented
Love your videoss
THANK YOU OMG YOU SAVED MY LIFE😫❤️❤️
Спасибо!
Super useful!
Thank you that helps me a looot
안녕하세요 언니는. 고마워요
waahh thanks for this video ❤❤
Can you do a video on Present progressive tense? In the process of doing something (___ing) Conjugations of 고 있어요 or 고 습니다 etc. That seems like it would be more needed for conversations but there are not very many videos on it.
2:13 - too come should be to come
Plain Form: 산다, 논다, 만난다, 온다, 본다, 한다, 먹는다, 입는다, 마신다, 가르친다, 세운다, 쓴다, 슬프다, 바쁘다
Well... what about honorifics? when you speak with present tense you don't use them? everything stays same?
쓰다 was conjugated to 써요 although it contains a dubbel consonant. Is it because there's no other vocal to use?
Can you please do an episode speaking only Korean? That'll be really neat :)
You seem like having two personalities. It's upto your language. Of course both English and Korean are pretty good.😊😊
So, with the rule you said about 2 syllable verbs that end with the vowel 으 on the second syllable then we should use the dominate vowel in the first syllable to replace the 으 (your example at 7:03: 바쁘다 becoming 바빠요 , does that mean that a verb such as 모르다 (to not know) would become 모로요?
No. Actually, if the syllable before it has ㅏ or ㅗ it will be both changed into ㅏ.
So 모르다 would become 몰라요.
However, I-m sorry because now i think you would ask why did I add an extra ㄹ at the end of the first syllable, I don-t know it either. But the important thing is that as you can see the second syllable-s vowel is aㅏ.
Hope it help (kind of)
Thank you! I'm glad you brought this to my attention. I researched online and found a page specifically regarding 르 ending words. It seems there is that specific rule for 르 ending words (but with a few exceptions). The general rule is just as you explained. For present tense, drop the 다, add a ㄹ to the bottom of the first syllable and then add 라요. Examples given were 빠르다 (to be fast) into 빨라요. And 모르다 (to not know) into 몰라요. Also for past tense, 빠르다 will be 빨랐어요 and 모르다 will be 몰랐어요.
However, the ㅂ니다 endings would not follow this rule. Example, 모르다 would become 모릅니다. Or with 세요 ending. Example, 모르다, which will be 모르세요.
It also mentioned that there are some 르 ending words that do not follow the conjugation rule for present tense of adding a ㄹ to the bottom of the first syllable and then adding 라요.. Examples such as 따르다 would become 따라요.
Thanks again. It helped a lot!
Супер) молодец, очень доступно объясняешь) лайк твоему каналу!
I didn't see any verb examples with no pat'chim that end with ㅓ. Are there any and how would you conjugate them? Would you just use the 어요 ending the same as when you have a non-pat'chim verb that ends with ㅏ you just use the 아요?
I also learn about present with 는 so what is it? When we use what she are saying
When we use this
I am confuse
does this apply for both verbs and adjectives?
My teacher taught us that it was 아요, 어요, and 여요...with (하) being the only verb stem followed by this. Idk. I was just never taught that 해요 is one of the three 'official' past tense endings.
That's perfectly fine :) Try not to focus on 'rules' and just feel how the language flows and follow your gut. There are lots of ways to organise patterns of conjugation :)
where do you live? (London/US) cause i wanna get a teacher
can you help me about "bad-da" which means "to receive"?
i'm sorry i cant type korean because i use PC now. from the grammar, i think it must be "bad-ayo", but i found from many korean dramas that koreans sometimes use "bad-eoyo" too.
can you explain me that? thanks^^
Hello. This is really confusing me. How do you conjugate the -ing form of Korean verbs? What's the difference from present tense? Can't find any videos of that here in UA-cam. Please help. Thank you.
Present tense in Korean is basically the "ing" form of verbs/adverbs/adjectives. The beautiful thing about Korean is that there aren't as many rules when it comes to conjugating. For example:
먹다= to eat
Present tense:
먹어요= I'm eating
먹어자요=let's eat
Past tense:
먹었어요=I ate
Future tense:
먹을 거예요 = I will (go) eat
Hope that made sense. You just have to find the flow of the language and not try to form it in the way you would in your mother language.
"let's eat" =먹자, 먹어요. In any case '~요'-end forms are polite forms.
Be~ing is also expressed by ~고 있어요.
먹어요=I eat or I'm eating.
먹고 있어요= I'm eating.
#tnx Love lukn all gud..i wish to make vids too but u gota know lots..
I'm kinda confused. You explained greatly, but i'm also studying korean through the howtostudykorean website and it says that you should add 는다 to the stems to conjugate? What should I really do cos I have no idea who's right lmao
Lorena They are the same thing except they both r used in different times
Some suggestions i have for your korean, as someone who fluently speaks it and talks like a native, the first thing i noticed was when you say 여러분 you pronounce 분 more like 븐 . :) its more ooo - ish if you know what i mean haha
wow... Even I am korean, this part looks difficult.
i dont understand. Once you conjugate the verbs, what does it mean?
yah i got the answer to everything but that, i'd like a context for this "present tense"
In it's non-conjugated form, it pretty much just means "to be something" and when it is conjugated it means "it is something". Like 보다 means "to see" and 봐요 means "I see" (or they see, he sees, she sees). I hope this makes sense, but if not, I can try to explain it better if you have questions. ^^
Wait, so is their different ways to conjugate for the different forms like the "you" form "we" form "I" form etc...?
no unlike languages such as French, Korean doesn't really use pronouns as much, you can say for example 나는 좋아해요 (i like) but take off the 나는 and the 좋아해요 would still imply you are saying (i like) I think this is right but I know for a fact for emotions/adjectives that this is the case so it might be the same with verbs - there is no different endings corresponding to pronouns
+Caitlin Kirby ahh okay thank you so much!!
+shewolf500 no problem I hope I helped - good luck from an Irish learner!!!
thank you so much for these videos i understand conjugation just a little before this no one ever goes through everything haha♡
Why do you conjugate 서두르다 (to hurry, rush) to 서둘러요?
+Suga Swag 서두르다 becomes 서두르. It ends with a ㅡ so you take the ㅡ away and put the ㅓ 요in it's place. She explains it at 5: 47.
Also look at this picture. It helped me learn the present conjuagation.
www.koreanfromzero.com/lessons/images/image77.png
***** Thank you
But if you only conjugate the verb 하다 like for example I do this, would it be correct to change the verb into 하요?
any verb ends with 하다 is exception you just simply replaced with 해요
thanx
Well, grammatically 바쁘 + 어요 = 바빠요 is right, but most of Koreans simply don't care about it. Some of them say 바빠요, and the other say 바뻐요. So well, it depends on the people you meet.
how about 주다 ?
당신은 인형같이 너무 예쁩니다. 너무 너무 너무 이쁩니다.
the intro is so cute, reminds me of the big Korean girl who got pushed by a skinny guy and she throws him into the water.
Где ты живёшь?
I don't really get the 바쁘다 becomes 바빠요
+Noori Nessi But 쓰다 has a double consonant but it's 써요? How so?
+sarah iman When you want to conjugate a word that ends with ㅡ(a vowel) like in 바쁘다 you delete the 다 and are left with: 바쁘 . Because it ends with a vowel, and the vowel is ㅡ you need to look at the vowel before it. If the vowel before it has a ㅏ or ㅗ then it becomes ㅏ. 바쁘 the vowel before ㅡ is ㅏ. There for you need to change the ㅡ to ㅏ요. 바쁘다>바쁘>바빠요.
But if you conjugate a word and it ends with a consonant like in 만들다(to make)>만들. If you look at the last vowel it is ㅡ but the word does not end with it, it ends with a consonant. That's why you use the normal rule. 만들>만들어요.
Look at this picture if you didn't understand me:
www.koreanfromzero.com/lessons/images/image77.png
I hope it helps!
Ive noticed that your accent sounds slightly aussie in certain words straight after you making a korean sound lol
wow
Ahh KOREA
Could you do a video about all the pronouns ;)
Could focus much more without the music. Thank you.
Честно говоря понял лишь половину) Смотрю эти видео только из твоих глаз анимешных Рита)
발음이 점점 한국 사람 스러워 지내요 ㅋ
Really good, I'd just ask to speak little bit slower
i could kiss you, you dont know how much my HW is killing me
아이고...저렇게 풀어버리니 한글이 어렵게 느껴지네요. 영어가 어렵게 느껴지는 이유랑 비슷한 듯...