Same. Everyone is like "you handwriting is so bad I can't even read it" or "are you left handed" (I'm not, but that's offensive to left handed people.)
I'm native Korean, and I didn't know that Hangeul handwriting is quite hard to mock the natives! I could always figure out when non-natives write hangeul, but I didn't really know how I could tell the differences. Now I kinda know why they look so 'non-native'! I highly appreciate the observation and effort you made to improve the writing! I was so surprised I was writing just as what you said on the video! I use both cursive ㄹ and the 3 stroke version!
안녕하세요~ 영어를 되게 잘 아시는 것 같은데 뭔가를 간단하게 수정해도 괜찮을까요? 댓글에서 'mock' 쓰셨는데 '모방하다'나 '따라 하다'라는 뜻으로 쓰시려고 하셨죠? 'mock'는 사실 보통 '놀리다', '비웃다' 등 뜻으로 써서 오히려 'mimic'이라는 말이 원래 쓰시려고 했던 뜻과 더 알맞을 것 같습니다. 도움이 됐으면 좋겠습니다^^
@@malia4394 okay, im not her but i do have, download a hangeul keyboard and start with the voyels, reproducing the sounds, then you can go to the consonants, double consonants... Also you can practice writing your idol name, or the group name in hangeul it helped me a lot, i also downloaded an an app called *Write it! Korean* it helps you to remember the consonants and voyels so thats it.
My handwriting is pretty decent, but it gets messy when i write something like (여덟), (꽃) when the characters are big to be on one another, can you please do a part2 on how to fix this?
you can get a notebook with squares instead of lines to train your handwriting on (ofc don't get notebooks with super tiny squares like the kind in bullet journals). if you don't have those notebooks there, get a notebook with blank pages and draw your own square grids. the size depends on how small/big you want your words to be. but i suggest making large boxes first then eventually make smaller ones. as for writing the words, try imagining grid lines on each square. for 꽃, you can see that it has three components: ㄲㅗㅊ, so divide the square into three rectangles (top, middle, bottom) and fit each component into each rectangle. for longer words like 여덟, draw 2 consecutive squares with 1 common side in the middle (i.e. the squares are stuck to each other, not separate). this gives you a sense on how much spacing is needed between each character of a phrase. then do the same as 꽃 and divide each square according to the character's number of components (i.e. 2 rectangles (left and right) for 여 & 4 tiny squares (top left corner + bottom left corner + top right corner, + bottom right corner) for 덟) and then you can do this same thing with any phrase/word of any length.
Interesting. As a Chinese native, I never thought when learning to write ㄹ,ㅅ, and ㅁ in any other way than described. Since I guess they are quite similar to 己,人,and 口。
Same haha. I started out with learning Japanese so I thought all those strokes were completely natural. I can't even imagine people writing it in one stroke.
it gets easier when you memorize each of their names so you won't have difficulty with the idea of initial and final sound. ex ㅎ(hi-eut) it begins with 'h' (initial sound) and ends with 't' (final). ㄹ(ri-eul) - r(initial sound) l(final)
As a Korean who has used Korean Alphabet all my life, I would recommend that the consonant size should be unified so that it fits in to the same square boundary. If that consistently same size consonant rule is preserved, your handwriting can look more neat than ever before..
@@HassanPlayzsometimes when writing I accidentally write the Korean letter instead of the English one at the start of the word lol. Like if I write "start" I write ㅅ and then stare at it for a moment before erasing it haha
In moments like this I'm glad I started with Chinese at first, because stroke order is so important there, so now- after writing lots and lots of 汉字, stroke order is something pretty natural for me. (Too natural, sometimes my squares on math look more like 口, than like what teacher drew😂)
same, it was so easy and quick for me to write the korean alphabet in my handwriting style because they look like some chinese characters e.g. ㅅ->人, ㅁ->口, ㄹ->弓, so literally all i had to do was just position the alphabets to fit nicely
May I ask what kind of marterials you use for learning Chinese? Im using a few apps (like Hello Chinese, Lingodeer) and some books, but maybe you have a good recommendation :D
But yeah I went straight into somewhere quite near the "native korean" handwriting when I first started writing and it was probably cuz of chinese. Oh and by writing, I mean copying lyrics n annoying my korean friend hahaha I have never actly learnt Korean but I can read and understand like simple & common phrases
@@meeps8456 ahh, right. my brain farted out so i forgot the word 己🤦. but yeah same, i would constantly write lyrics as well, to the point i can write down an entire song's lyrics solely by memory and/or even by ear.
Thanks for the tips! I think it would have been good if you showed us how to write 3 letters on top of each other like 좋, cuz I always screw up the ㅎ I feel like there's not enough space haha. Guess I have to practice more
i had this problem too! try to make the first letter smaller, the “little stick” a tad shorter (the upwards stick above ㅗ), and use the space left for the last one
I'm learning Korean about one month. I really can see a difference in my handwriting because I study like 6 hours everyday. If you leran the basics first these common beginner mistakes will not occur that much
Wow,, I’m Korean !! Your video is totally perfect. Pronunciation, sentence structure and handwriting. Every Korean learners have to watch this video!!! Her pronunciation and handwriting etc are the perfect
저도 일단 린디 누나의 조언에 덧붙여서 얘기를 드리자면 그냥 연습밖에 없어요 연습을 꾸준히 해서 글씨에 익숙해지는 수 밖에 없고요 저도 어릴 때에는 글씨가 안 좋았어요(한국인 기준에선 지금도 썩 좋은 편은 아니지만 ㅎㅎ) 뭐든지 처음부터 완벽하게 하는 건 어려워요 어떤 글자든 다 써보시는 걸 추천드립니다. I'll add for Lindie's advices. Just practice. Practice is possible for everything. Just trying every letters and words. I also had bad writing skills when I was young(but as a native korean, I still have bad skills) but I think, trying everything being a perfect is very hard. So my opinion is just practice every day, when you study about korean alphabet.
I watched this almost 2 years ago and I clearly remember thinking why the heck am I watching this I will never learn korean and don't want to either. But here I am watching this after attending my first 3 classes, life can be crazy! your vidz will be incredibly helpful so thank you in advance! 😊❤️
Best advice for korean learners. Get a 5mm squared book and practice making your syllable blocks in 2x2s. The squares will keep your lines on the horizontal and vertical, so all of your characters will look neater. It'll also be much easier to make your syllable blocks too as you can see if you're extending out of the square!
I think the key to making Korean handwriting look nice is the consistency in size - for ex: 사랑해 has the same rectangular size all throughout. I find that a lot of people keep the consonants the same size even for (...)characters that have a bottom consonant which will create really wonky sizes (especially when it comes to like 좋 or 꽃). Also, for vowels, it looks nicer if the vertical line is longer than the consonant. If they’re the same length, it makes it look very wide.
i was just thinking to myself while studying today that i need to improve my handwriting, and then one of my study group friends sent me this video! thank you!!
I'm so glad that this vid popped up in my recommendations. I've recently started learning Korean and your tips are very helpful. I'll practice more now. 감사합니다.
Guuuurl your handwriting is goals, but you already know that! I need to work on double consonants because they annoy me a lot. hahah thanks for the tips lovely ♥ 린디두 홧팅해여!
I am a Korean living in Canada. Your hand writing looks so much better than mine! It shows your background as a designer. Thank you for making Hangeul look beautiful. BTW I am an also an artist(a painter).
My korean teacher taught us to write properly in korean. Everything with downstrokes and to the right. I didn't realize I was writing like a native 'til I watched this video!
this was actually really useful. i had already figured out some mistakes and corrected them and you helped with the rest of it. i think i have to buy a grid notebook to practice writing hangeul.
please do one of these for chinese handwriting, i cannot find an in depth video guide and im obsessed with how you formatted and demonstrated this ahhh
You know what? I learnt that stroke order when I was 17, very recently😂 In effect, even many natives don't know nor really care about it. Whoever watches this video probably will get a more decent handwriting than most of Korean natives in my opinion😭
People into design like her probably also focus much more on handwriting and typography than regular people. I'm not Korean but my own native handwriting is not very pretty. It looks kinda childish, but alas I am an adult. And if people study my language really well they probably also become better at grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation compared to an average native. At least if the language is taken as that which you read in a dictionary and are taught in schools - as opposed to how the country's population currently communicate.
OOOF i made ALLLLLLLLLLL the mistakes. Must be why my handwriting is barley recognizable. Thanks Lindie you are always a help. If only it was that easy to improve Japanese Kanji writing
It is actually not that difficult. You just need to know how to write the radicals that make up the kanji correctly. For instance the kanji 人 is pretty much written like the Korean ㅅ.
i can write Hangul comfortably but i don’t mind bc i love ur videos and it made me realize my progress:) and ur accent sounds like a local Seoul girl!!! amazing!
I've only been writing hangul for about 10 months, and I used to write like this but now I tried to improve my handwriting to look more like what I see in books and it's starting to look better, thank you 💜
I don’t even know why I’m watching this, I’m too lazy to improve my English handwriting as it is. My philosophy is “can you read it? Ok, then it’s good.” As long as someone who speaks Korean knows what I’m writing then I think that it’s a-ok.
I came here so that I can understand the handwriting in Korean comics. I was so confused by what I was seeing LOL I am making all of the beginner mistakes, but it is nice to know that writing everyday will help me to improve. Great video!
thank you so much for this video~ i’ve been trying to learn korean and i noticed my handwriting looked really boxy compared to native koreans handwriting and i’ve come across this video and it was really helpful. :)💛💛
I've realised that even though I didn't pay much attention to these details, early on I've learnt the right way to write the letters. Yay! I assume is much easier to correct minor mistakes than to correct the whole sequence of strokes one is used to make in order to write the letters. Thank u for your tips!
I always wanted to read and write the native handwriting.. always thought.. "do they really write like this in daily life?" Finally found a video teaching this!
1:14 자연스럽게 '커엽징?'으로 봤다..ㅎㅎ I like to write different fonts in handwriting, so this was interesting in my Korean eye. I wonder what English native would say when they see my english handwriting!
You’re handwriting looks like a KakaoTalk font lol so cute! I’m currently practicing writing Hangul but it looks decent but a little messy. I practice by writing different kpop song lyrics and phrases I see/hear.
I noticed that I don't make any of those mistakes and I realized its because I took chinese lessons as a kid haha they actually paid off. The way we wrote mandarin is similar to how people write hangul as well
I really didn't know the native way of writing hangul when I started writing it, but after watching your video, I just realized I started writing them the native way 😂
2:06 I was like "Yes, yes, nice handwriting", then realized I was looking at the Japanese at the top and not the Korean underneath. Woops But anyway, your handwriting is very nice, regardless of the language. I wish mine was so neat
Very recently I was thinking to improve my hanguel handwriting i didn't know where to start and then this video popped up and now I know. Thanx to you lindie 😊😘
I love ur notes! I'm learning Korean since 2015 and I can say I can relate to this. But the little difference is I focused on the hangul, not the romanizations. 😊😊
Cool video! I’m not trying to insult you in any way or disregard this video because to most it’s probably rather helpful, but a lot of the “beginner issues” in this video could’ve been avoided by knowing the stroke order of the characters and having a basic grasp of how to attach consonants to standing vowels vs lying vowels. That was the first thing we were encouraged to learn as children and I suggest everyone learn that because it’s a pretty quick and simple way of improving your handwriting without having to think too hard while you’re writing. If you’ve memorized it it will come naturally to you :) - once again no hate! I love the effort put into this video, it’s very direct!^^ ㅋㅋ
Hi Lindie, thank you for showing the beautiful Korean handwriting on UA-cam channel. Today is my first time to learn the beginning Korean handwriting from you. Could you make more video about the handwriting, please.
i've been learning korean for over a year and a half but back then I would write it very blocky and awkward and I didn't know stroke order. I learned that learning takes time and my handwriting has improved but I still have much to more to improve of it. Thank you for the advice.
I think the big takeaway is that beginners try to write each letter separately and clearly, but as you get comfortable in the language, its easier to recognize more "sloppy" writing. Just like how youngsters in your native language write very specifically and with a lot of thought, but as they gey older they're more comfortable with writing. My Japanese made a similar change over about 3 years of writing it everyday. My Korean, still blocky.
wow i was impressed with all of your the notebooks..looking into them, i could see how hard you try..! that's amazing! it's so fun to see how your handwriting has been improved..i could see that your current handwriting looks quite native!!! i was so surprised:)
I started learning korean threes years ago by watching a learn hangul video where the teacher would actually write down each of the vowels and constants which I think helped me not make these mistakes however I hated writing the ㄹ because I felt mine looked to blocky and just ugly but when I found out about cursive ㄹ it not only looked natural but it was so much faster and easier to write. Idk if you already made a video on this but something I struggled with when I first started to learn was reading native Korean's handwriting.
I've come to the realization that my handwriting, regardless of the language, is going to look trash.
cattarama saaammeee lol
Same. Everyone is like "you handwriting is so bad I can't even read it" or "are you left handed" (I'm not, but that's offensive to left handed people.)
lol😂
hahaha you're not alone lol!!
yeah my native is korean and it looks bad also my english and greek are so
I'm native Korean, and I didn't know that Hangeul handwriting is quite hard to mock the natives! I could always figure out when non-natives write hangeul, but I didn't really know how I could tell the differences. Now I kinda know why they look so 'non-native'! I highly appreciate the observation and effort you made to improve the writing!
I was so surprised I was writing just as what you said on the video! I use both cursive ㄹ and the 3 stroke version!
안녕하세요~ 영어를 되게 잘 아시는 것 같은데 뭔가를 간단하게 수정해도 괜찮을까요? 댓글에서 'mock' 쓰셨는데 '모방하다'나 '따라 하다'라는 뜻으로 쓰시려고 하셨죠? 'mock'는 사실 보통 '놀리다', '비웃다' 등 뜻으로 써서 오히려 'mimic'이라는 말이 원래 쓰시려고 했던 뜻과 더 알맞을 것 같습니다.
도움이 됐으면 좋겠습니다^^
@@TheJoheunLife Mock doesn't always have to be negative connotation. For example a mock test or a mock simulation..
jo sen zing out !!
@@TheJoheunLife exactly correct; in this context "mock" reads as an insult, but "mimic" is what is intended :)
l just started seriously learning Korean about 2 months ago and lol your 2009 notebook hand writing looks just like mine rn R.I.P
sailorginger how are you doing? Cuz I just started learning today if you have any tips 🤗
@@malia4394 okay, im not her but i do have, download a hangeul keyboard and start with the voyels, reproducing the sounds, then you can go to the consonants, double consonants...
Also you can practice writing your idol name, or the group name in hangeul it helped me a lot, i also downloaded an an app called *Write it! Korean* it helps you to remember the consonants and voyels so thats it.
Deborah Carvalho thank you! I’ll definitely use these tips!
Ikr😭
@@deborahcmo Thank you so much I've just downloaded the app
"forgive your ex boyfriend and don't think about him" 😂😂
You're so precious lindie ❤️
HAHAHA Oh dear. Thank you sweet Maria. See you soon!
TOTALLY feelin' the same vibes right now, so serendipitous and awesome you kept that in there!!
Lol
My handwriting is pretty decent, but it gets messy when i write something like (여덟), (꽃) when the characters are big to be on one another, can you please do a part2 on how to fix this?
you can get a notebook with squares instead of lines to train your handwriting on (ofc don't get notebooks with super tiny squares like the kind in bullet journals).
if you don't have those notebooks there, get a notebook with blank pages and draw your own square grids. the size depends on how small/big you want your words to be. but i suggest making large boxes first then eventually make smaller ones.
as for writing the words, try imagining grid lines on each square. for 꽃, you can see that it has three components: ㄲㅗㅊ, so divide the square into three rectangles (top, middle, bottom) and fit each component into each rectangle. for longer words like 여덟, draw 2 consecutive squares with 1 common side in the middle (i.e. the squares are stuck to each other, not separate). this gives you a sense on how much spacing is needed between each character of a phrase. then do the same as 꽃 and divide each square according to the character's number of components (i.e. 2 rectangles (left and right) for 여 & 4 tiny squares (top left corner + bottom left corner + top right corner, + bottom right corner) for 덟)
and then you can do this same thing with any phrase/word of any length.
Oh I never thought of this!
여덟
Same here....
Mhm yeah same..My letters are all squished together and it's so messy 🤣
Interesting. As a Chinese native, I never thought when learning to write ㄹ,ㅅ, and ㅁ in any other way than described. Since I guess they are quite similar to 己,人,and 口。
Same haha. I started out with learning Japanese so I thought all those strokes were completely natural. I can't even imagine people writing it in one stroke.
Koreans also think ㄹ ㅅ ㅁ are similar to them😂 Body, human, mouth
@@yeongwookim3167 hM
Yes, they are very much similar.
I'm learning Chinese (Mandarin) and Korean
For me it was the other way around, I learned Hangul first.
as I am a native korean, I feel good when I see people that love KOREAN
jo sen zing out !!
i love the 'ㅎ' character, it looks like a little man with a hat on
that's a good way of memorising the sound aswell hahah
it gets easier when you memorize each of their names so you won't have difficulty with the idea of initial and final sound. ex ㅎ(hi-eut) it begins with 'h' (initial sound) and ends with 't' (final).
ㄹ(ri-eul) - r(initial sound) l(final)
that’s actually how they teach you that sound. a man on a “H”at -> H
As a Korean who has used Korean Alphabet all my life, I would recommend that the consonant size should be unified so that it fits in to the same square boundary. If that consistently same size consonant rule is preserved, your handwriting can look more neat than ever before..
jo sen zing out !!
@@종군기자-q5u Thank you for your concern..
Sometimes when I’m writing I always make “ㅐ” look like a “H” and it kills inside it’s like a knife cutting me
BCS’ same gurl same
SAME, I DON"T KNOW WHY BUT THEN I MAKE H LOOK LIKE ㅐ SOMETIMES WHEN I WRITE ENGLISH
@@HassanPlayzsometimes when writing I accidentally write the Korean letter instead of the English one at the start of the word lol. Like if I write "start" I write ㅅ and then stare at it for a moment before erasing it haha
한국인 입장에서 한글을 이렇게 바라보니 신기하네요. 필기체까지 완벽히 구사하는 대단한 분 ㄷㄷ
In moments like this I'm glad I started with Chinese at first, because stroke order is so important there, so now- after writing lots and lots of 汉字, stroke order is something pretty natural for me. (Too natural, sometimes my squares on math look more like 口, than like what teacher drew😂)
same, it was so easy and quick for me to write the korean alphabet in my handwriting style because they look like some chinese characters e.g. ㅅ->人, ㅁ->口, ㄹ->弓, so literally all i had to do was just position the alphabets to fit nicely
May I ask what kind of marterials you use for learning Chinese? Im using a few apps (like Hello Chinese, Lingodeer) and some books, but maybe you have a good recommendation :D
@@madeofcastiron lolol I always thought ㄹ was like 己 or 已
But yeah I went straight into somewhere quite near the "native korean" handwriting when I first started writing and it was probably cuz of chinese. Oh and by writing, I mean copying lyrics n annoying my korean friend hahaha I have never actly learnt Korean but I can read and understand like simple & common phrases
@@meeps8456 ahh, right. my brain farted out so i forgot the word 己🤦. but yeah same, i would constantly write lyrics as well, to the point i can write down an entire song's lyrics solely by memory and/or even by ear.
한국인으로써, 한국인들이 무의식적으로 적는 저러한 사소한부분을 전부 관찰해내셨다는점이 대단하게 느껴지네요. 한글에 대한 남다른 애착도 느껴지십니다.
jo sen zing out !!
Thanks for the tips! I think it would have been good if you showed us how to write 3 letters on top of each other like 좋, cuz I always screw up the ㅎ I feel like there's not enough space haha. Guess I have to practice more
asjsjs same
Panicatthekitchen, Omg Ikr It's always so Spacey and out of place when I right the three characters on top of each other lol
i had this problem too! try to make the first letter smaller, the “little stick” a tad shorter (the upwards stick above ㅗ), and use the space left for the last one
Lmao same
Haha same, its such a struggle
이건 한국인한테도 좋은 팁이다
I'm learning Korean about one month. I really can see a difference in my handwriting because I study like 6 hours everyday. If you leran the basics first these common beginner mistakes will not occur that much
Wow,, I’m Korean !! Your video is totally perfect. Pronunciation, sentence structure and handwriting. Every Korean learners have to watch this video!!! Her pronunciation and handwriting etc are the perfect
저도 일단 린디 누나의 조언에 덧붙여서 얘기를 드리자면 그냥 연습밖에 없어요 연습을 꾸준히 해서 글씨에 익숙해지는 수 밖에 없고요 저도 어릴 때에는 글씨가 안 좋았어요(한국인 기준에선 지금도 썩 좋은 편은 아니지만 ㅎㅎ) 뭐든지 처음부터 완벽하게 하는 건 어려워요 어떤 글자든 다 써보시는 걸 추천드립니다.
I'll add for Lindie's advices. Just practice. Practice is possible for everything. Just trying every letters and words. I also had bad writing skills when I was young(but as a native korean, I still have bad skills) but I think, trying everything being a perfect is very hard. So my opinion is just practice every day, when you study about korean alphabet.
I watched this almost 2 years ago and I clearly remember thinking why the heck am I watching this I will never learn korean and don't want to either. But here I am watching this after attending my first 3 classes, life can be crazy! your vidz will be incredibly helpful so thank you in advance! 😊❤️
Best advice for korean learners. Get a 5mm squared book and practice making your syllable blocks in 2x2s. The squares will keep your lines on the horizontal and vertical, so all of your characters will look neater. It'll also be much easier to make your syllable blocks too as you can see if you're extending out of the square!
Sunthlower what about graphing paper? would that work as well?
@@anastasia6455 Well yeah. If it's just with boxes small enough to use 4 per syllable block. So in metric a notebook with paper that's 5 mm / 5 mm.
I think the key to making Korean handwriting look nice is the consistency in size - for ex: 사랑해 has the same rectangular size all throughout. I find that a lot of people keep the consonants the same size even for (...)characters that have a bottom consonant which will create really wonky sizes (especially when it comes to like 좋 or 꽃). Also, for vowels, it looks nicer if the vertical line is longer than the consonant. If they’re the same length, it makes it look very wide.
i was just thinking to myself while studying today that i need to improve my handwriting, and then one of my study group friends sent me this video! thank you!!
Can you do a Japanese version of this video? Specifically for hiragana and katakana?
Joseph haha hey! What a small world 🙈❤️
Joseph I love how infamous I've become now 😂 I can assure you I don't have beef with very many people unless they're being silly 🙈
Joseph glad I could play Jesus for a day 😏😂
Ikr i need this, mostly because im from JSA
I need thissssss
I'm so glad that this vid popped up in my recommendations. I've recently started learning Korean and your tips are very helpful. I'll practice more now. 감사합니다.
Without Nationality 화이팅
This was so interesting! Korean has such a special place in my heart (as your videos do!)
It's crazy how much this video actually helps
even stuff that I knew about but didn't think it was important... trust me, it helps
Lindie: I’ve been learning korean since 2009.
Me: *I’ve been learning Korean since August of 2019 😃*
Iv been learning sence march 24 2020
me since january 2020
Everyone starts somewhere
I started early March 2020 :)
@@BooksToAshes i started June gosh I'm so late 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Guuuurl your handwriting is goals, but you already know that! I need to work on double consonants because they annoy me a lot. hahah thanks for the tips lovely ♥ 린디두 홧팅해여!
Giulia Elia your Korean is wrong but that's ok lol
에밀리조용히해 thanks for the heads up! :D
에밀리조용히해 I think she just wrote it in 애교 style lol like the 여 is 100% 애교 😂
Natalia Garza no her grammar is wrong.
에밀리조용히해 may I know in which parts? I only wrote one sentence and got it wrong, damn it!:'(
I am a Korean living in Canada. Your hand writing looks so much better than mine! It shows your background as a designer. Thank you for making Hangeul look beautiful. BTW I am an also an artist(a painter).
왜 내가 봐도 꿀팁이지 그냥 글씨체 예쁘게 쓰는법영상 보는거 가타...
My korean teacher taught us to write properly in korean. Everything with downstrokes and to the right. I didn't realize I was writing like a native 'til I watched this video!
this was actually really useful. i had already figured out some mistakes and corrected them and you helped with the rest of it. i think i have to buy a grid notebook to practice writing hangeul.
quite helpful for me who has just learned all hangul letters and knowing 0 word. Cannot wait to watch your Chinese handwriting tutorial
please do one of these for chinese handwriting, i cannot find an in depth video guide and im obsessed with how you formatted and demonstrated this ahhh
제 여자친구가 한국말을 아직 배우는중이라 린디님 영상으로 공부 시키는 중이에요ㅎㅎ 솔직히 완벽하다 싶을 정도로 원어민 급이세요...한국인들만 아는 작은 습관을 어떻게 아세요? 독학의 수준을 초월하신듯!!!
BLACK 여자친구분이 외국분이세요??
omg you woke up at 5:30 to study? what a discipline! respect!!
You know what? I learnt that stroke order when I was 17, very recently😂 In effect, even many natives don't know nor really care about it. Whoever watches this video probably will get a more decent handwriting than most of Korean natives in my opinion😭
맞아요 ㅋㅋㅋ Her handwriting is better than all my native Korean students can write.
People into design like her probably also focus much more on handwriting and typography than regular people.
I'm not Korean but my own native handwriting is not very pretty. It looks kinda childish, but alas I am an adult.
And if people study my language really well they probably also become better at grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation compared to an average native.
At least if the language is taken as that which you read in a dictionary and are taught in schools - as opposed to how the country's population currently communicate.
저런 것까지... 대단하네요.
훨씬 자연스러운거 맞아요.
OOOF i made ALLLLLLLLLLL the mistakes. Must be why my handwriting is barley recognizable. Thanks Lindie you are always a help. If only it was that easy to improve Japanese Kanji writing
It is actually not that difficult. You just need to know how to write the radicals that make up the kanji correctly. For instance the kanji 人 is pretty much written like the Korean ㅅ.
한국인이 영어필기체에 관심가지듯이 한글을 공부하는 외국인이 한글을 더 예쁘게쓰는거에 관심있다는게 놀랍네요! 그리고 그런 궁금한 부분들을 해소시켜주는 영상이라니 대단해요 ~! -지나가던 한국인
와 웬만한 한국인들보다 잘쓰시는데요?ㅋㅋㅋㅋ 일단 저보다 글씨 잘쓰시네요!!!
i can write Hangul comfortably but i don’t mind bc i love ur videos and it made me realize my progress:) and ur accent sounds like a local Seoul girl!!! amazing!
I've only been writing hangul for about 10 months, and I used to write like this but now I tried to improve my handwriting to look more like what I see in books and it's starting to look better, thank you 💜
This youtuber's korean writing
= 100% native
진짜 똑똑하신분이네
유치원글씨체에서 완전 이쁜 학생체로...
진짜 대단하시다
im korea and your hand writing is very perfect!!! most korean cant tell that you are not korean
What are things that make your handwriting look like it was not written by a korean?
와 한글 쓸 때 어떻게 써야 자연스러운지까지 안다는게 정말 대단해요 다이어리에 써진 글도 글씨체랑 문장이 그냥 한국인이 쓴거 같아요~
I don’t even know why I’m watching this, I’m too lazy to improve my English handwriting as it is. My philosophy is “can you read it? Ok, then it’s good.” As long as someone who speaks Korean knows what I’m writing then I think that it’s a-ok.
I know that you've done this for about 11 years but i still envy your handwriting i just started before yesterday
Thank you for this. I knew my handwriting was unnatural and I wanted to improve without becoming sloppy. Thank you for this video!
This helped me so much!
*Thank you! My hand writing already looks so much neater and precise!*
와우! 전 한국인이예요!
이런 영상 보면 기분이 묘하네용 ㅎㅎㅎ..
더 많은 영상 보려고 구독하고 가요❤️
I came here so that I can understand the handwriting in Korean comics. I was so confused by what I was seeing LOL I am making all of the beginner mistakes, but it is nice to know that writing everyday will help me to improve. Great video!
This video is great, I’ve been looking for quick lessons on Korean handwriting forEVER
저 한국인인데 필기체 진짜 너무 귀엽고 이뻐요!! 글씨 잘쓰는 한국 여고생이 다이어리 쓴 것 같아요. 너무 자연스럽고. :) 감명 받았어요. 👍
my handwriting still really looks like a beginner (because i am a beginner lol) but otherwise i wouldn’t be able to read it haha great video!
thank you so much for this video~ i’ve been trying to learn korean and i noticed my handwriting looked really boxy compared to native koreans handwriting and i’ve come across this video and it was really helpful. :)💛💛
I've realised that even though I didn't pay much attention to these details, early on I've learnt the right way to write the letters. Yay! I assume is much easier to correct minor mistakes than to correct the whole sequence of strokes one is used to make in order to write the letters. Thank u for your tips!
The strokes order wasn't bad for me, since I've learned japanese before but the cursive writing was smthing new to me. So happy I've clicked on this 😊
I'm korean but I haven't studied it in 5 years... This video inspired me to begin learning again! Thank you!
헐...완전 연습많이하시고 잘아세요,,우리가어떻게 쓰는지 대단해요!
I always wanted to read and write the native handwriting.. always thought.. "do they really write like this in daily life?"
Finally found a video teaching this!
외국인에게 한국인 보다, 더 쉽게 한국어을 알려주는 멋진 선생닙입니다.. 넘 구ㅏ여워요. 응원할게요.
오 진짜 잘 쓰신다 외국 분들한테 정말 유익한 영상인 것 같아요!!
I'm native korean student but I learnd many things in this vidio! thanks
1:14 자연스럽게 '커엽징?'으로 봤다..ㅎㅎ
I like to write different fonts in handwriting, so this was interesting in my Korean eye. I wonder what English native would say when they see my english handwriting!
Helped me a lot! Thank you 😊
You’re handwriting looks like a KakaoTalk font lol so cute! I’m currently practicing writing Hangul but it looks decent but a little messy. I practice by writing different kpop song lyrics and phrases I see/hear.
I noticed that I don't make any of those mistakes and I realized its because I took chinese lessons as a kid haha they actually paid off. The way we wrote mandarin is similar to how people write hangul as well
Wow this going to very helpful for my korean learning and also your hand writing it’s so beautiful
I love to see a video about Japanese and Chinese handwriting ^_^ I loved this so much
I really didn't know the native way of writing hangul when I started writing it, but after watching your video, I just realized I started writing them the native way 😂
헐 글씨체 넘나 이쁜것.....
너무 이쁜데요?으헝 글씨체가 똥인 저는 눈물 흘리고 갑니당..
전남친 용서하기 무엇ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ너무 웃기네요
와 ~~글씨만보면 한국사람같아
보통 한국말 네이티브로 하는 외국인도 글씨보면 티나는데 대단하십니다 정말 감쪽같아요
Very useful tips Lindie. Thank you so much. ♥
2:06 I was like "Yes, yes, nice handwriting", then realized I was looking at the Japanese at the top and not the Korean underneath. Woops
But anyway, your handwriting is very nice, regardless of the language. I wish mine was so neat
look at this!!! you are better writer than me who even is Korean.
20년동안 한글 쓴 저보다 훨씬 잘 쓰시네요! 그만큼 노력하셨다는 뜻이겠죠:) 대단합니다!
우연히 영상을 보게 되었습니다. 예쁜 글씨체를 가지게 되었군요! 멋집니다. 오랜 노력의 결실인 것 같습니다. 영상 잘 보았습니다.
Thank you for this video! I've been looking for a video like this for so long and not found any good until yours, this actually really helped 🤗❤️
새로운 언어를 대하는 님의 자세가 정말 멋져요. 감동이에요😊
와... 중간에 노트에 쓰신거
제가 10분 넘게 공들여 쓴 글씨 보다도
너무 잘쓰시네요ㅠㅠ
귀찮음이랑 습관으로 오늘도 제 노트에는 지렁이가 기어다닙니다...
Very recently I was thinking to improve my hanguel handwriting i didn't know where to start and then this video popped up and now I know.
Thanx to you lindie 😊😘
Your handwriting is beautiful and totally like a native!
그대. 때문에. 세종대왕님 께서. 좋아
하실거에요~
우와 2018년꺼보니까 진짜 잘 쓰셨네요👍
I love ur notes! I'm learning Korean since 2015 and I can say I can relate to this. But the little difference is I focused on the hangul, not the romanizations. 😊😊
Cool video! I’m not trying to insult you in any way or disregard this video because to most it’s probably rather helpful, but a lot of the “beginner issues” in this video could’ve been avoided by knowing the stroke order of the characters and having a basic grasp of how to attach consonants to standing vowels vs lying vowels. That was the first thing we were encouraged to learn as children and I suggest everyone learn that because it’s a pretty quick and simple way of improving your handwriting without having to think too hard while you’re writing. If you’ve memorized it it will come naturally to you :) - once again no hate! I love the effort put into this video, it’s very direct!^^ ㅋㅋ
Seriously your Korean letters in your planner are much more better than me
Wow, I am Korean and your handwriing is really amazing! much better than mine.
한글 글씨체가 한국사람 못지않게 아주 좋아요! 어학의 천재!
와 한국인이 자연스럽게 쓰는 글씨체 연구 많이 하신것같아요!! 영어 배우는 것만 봐왔지만 한국어 알려주는 것을 보니 너무 재밌어요 ㅎㅎㅎ
Wow her handwriting is so much better than mine and im a native korean....
Hi Lindie, thank you for showing the beautiful Korean handwriting on UA-cam channel. Today is my first time to learn the beginning Korean handwriting from you. Could you make more video about the handwriting, please.
i've been learning korean for over a year and a half but back then I would write it very blocky and awkward and I didn't know stroke order. I learned that learning takes time and my handwriting has improved but I still have much to more to improve of it. Thank you for the advice.
디자인을 전공하셔서 그런지 어떤 글씨가 보기에 더 좋은지 잘아시는것 같네요
I think the big takeaway is that beginners try to write each letter separately and clearly, but as you get comfortable in the language, its easier to recognize more "sloppy" writing. Just like how youngsters in your native language write very specifically and with a lot of thought, but as they gey older they're more comfortable with writing. My Japanese made a similar change over about 3 years of writing it everyday. My Korean, still blocky.
wow i was impressed with all of your the notebooks..looking into them, i could see how hard you try..! that's amazing! it's so fun to see how your handwriting has been improved..i could see that your current handwriting looks quite native!!! i was so surprised:)
I started learning korean threes years ago by watching a learn hangul video where the teacher would actually write down each of the vowels and constants which I think helped me not make these mistakes however I hated writing the ㄹ because I felt mine looked to blocky and just ugly but when I found out about cursive ㄹ it not only looked natural but it was so much faster and easier to write. Idk if you already made a video on this but something I struggled with when I first started to learn was reading native Korean's handwriting.