I have been studying Korean for two years and begin an intermediate course next year. While this video is useful for me it is definitely not "absolute beginner" level.
I thought "absolute beginner" would mean: "Someone who has no idear about Korean, but knows some words" and not: "You are actually sitting in Korea now, ordered a meal in a restaurant in Korean and don't know how to buy a car or get a Job in Korea" -.-
HAHAHAHA thats me right now - i'm in korea for exchange and i can order a meal in restaurant but my korean knowledge isnt enough for me to understand what people are saying in the lift. This one is definitely an upper beginners though, i had to listen 3 times to catch the vocab and realise what they are saying
Onlything I can say in Korean is: "Hello. My name is (name). Nice to meet you!", "Very nice swimmingpool", "I am German", "You're an idiot/ Yo're stupid!" and "Stop it!"... and than I know some random words like: radio, banana, so, gae, maekju, soju, pang, bang and I can count to 5 in both countingsystems... ah this video confused me as I klicked on it. I thought it will come up an audio oor something where you see 3 ways to write and have to guess which is right and than they show you if your right and what it means^^
Once you Jimin you can't Jimout! I can say 'Hello. My name is Kyla. Bangtan Sonyeondan. Bang bang bang. Point, aim, shoot. My blood, sweat, and tears. I miss you.' edit: 2 months later and i can count to 3, say 'stop', 'fool', 'yes/no', 'please/thank you', 'forget it', 'as if it's the last', 'i don't want to cry', 'i like you', and 'Cleopatra: the world's best potato chip'. edit: over a year later and i still haven't made progress but wow was i sooo cringey back when i was a new army 😂. i understand so much more - i just need to learn the vocab but i'm recognizing the sentence structure and such.
I listened to this video about half a year ago and it was so hard but I decided randomly to come back to it and it was so easy that I didn’t even have to try 😂 I hope that gives you guys confidence to keep studying haha 너무 쉽네~~ 이 비디오를 6개월 전에 들었는데 그땐 너무 어려웠어.... 근데 이제 이해가 났어
@@zippyyourmouthy1587 I, for some reasons, just went out of my way and help Lauryn D with the Korean sentence they wrote. I'm sorry to have confused you!
It's like low intermediate. If you could understand the things they say, but couldn't know some words like i couldn't, then you should work on stuff like colors, numbers, clock, food, etc. I got the sentence patterns but i couldn't understand what they're exactly talking about. I was just suggesting. 😅 But this is a nice and fun way to study!
Just for context, guys, I've been self studying Korean for around 6 months and I understand around 90-95% of this video. When I first watched it I understood pretty much nothing. I should also point out I've listened to this video probably around 100-200 times over the past 6 months (without reading any of the translations, English or Korean - JUST listening) and slowly picked up a word or two used in the video each time I listened. On the segments where I just can't figure out what the hell they're saying, I'll come back and read the translations (the male voice actor talks a lot faster than the woman and he sometimes slurs words like 토요일 and 시작 etc). If you're new to Korean, don't let the title mislead you - this is NOT for absolute beginners. It took me 6 months to get to this level. Just know that if you keep at it and don't expect too much too quickly, you will get the most out of this video.
@@mimihua2 I have Korean dialogues recorded that I listen to when I can for listening practice. I'll also use flash cards not just for individual words but for sentence fragments and full sentences. For me it's more of a hobby than anything so I dont study very intensely and have no speaking practice, but I'd also recommend any platform where you can practice speaking to natives.
I´m glad you say that because I also rewinded the video to find out what he was saying when he said 토요일. It sounded not as I would expect the word to sound like. But I´m so happy that at least I understood the written version :) And yes, I´ve been studying hard during the last 3-4 months and still there are new words. I´d say it´s rather a B1/B2 level than A0/1. I maen making appointments at the hospital and stuff like that is my goal. It´s very advanced I´d say. Beginner level would be things like "how are you?", "what are your hobbies", "the weather is nice", "I have a sister and two cats" ...
After 5 months of studying Korean, I'm so proud of myself for understanding almost everything ^.^ I'm still having a hard time with numbers tho. -ps. To everyone who are studying Korean, 화이팅!!!
Which textbooks did you use ? TTMIK,YOSEI, EWHA, TUTTLE PUBLISHING, HIPPOCRENE KOREAN FOR BEGINNERS? DID YOU GO TO SCHOOL? TAKE A CLASS ? HAVE A TUTOR? How did you reach this point in five months?
Guys I am Korean and this listening is so bad cuz the tone of conversation is so weird and awkward. And 죄송합니다 is not excuse me. That is I’m sorry And excuse me is 실례합니다
Awesome video! I think of myself as a high beginner/low intermediate and I understand about 70%+ of each conversation and that's enough to answer everything correctly.
to the people who don’t understand this video, i recommend you to write down the vocabulary you don’t know from this video (when the subtitles come up) and memorise it. listen to the audio everyday and hopefully you guys can understand what is being said. it really helps
Remember watching and struggling with this about two years ago in college. Living in Korea now and this has become childsplay. Quite satisfying! For those of you struggling here, dont give up! Youll get much better someday through your work :)
Phew. Glad I’m starting this. Listening comprehension is the one form of studying I really haven’t delved into yet, but it is the most important for actually talking to people. Thank you for this high quality video!
3:23 '오늘 문 여는 시간이 어떻게 되나요?' does not mean 'What time do you close today?' Rather, it means the opposite. So you should say : '오늘 문 닫는 시간이 어떻게 되나요?' or '오늘 몇시까지 문을 여나요? '
Hi Yun Jae, Thanks for posting, you're right, the more commonly used phrase is 오늘 문 닫는 시간이 어떻게 되나요?' or '오늘 몇시까지 문을 여나요? ', thank you for pointing this out to us. Cheers, Team KoreanClass101.com
OMG, a few months (I guess 2) I was trying to practice my Korean listening skills and I just had like 2 answers rights, i could catch up some words but I really didn't understand what the girl or the speakers said. But after keeping with my studies I had all my answers rights, even if in my head I couldn't structure the sentence, I did understood the main ideas. I'm so proud of myself. I tell you this so you don´t give up on yourself and your studies. It may be difficult now but if you continue you'll see your progress, just keep going!!!!!!!!
I've been learning korean for over 4 years now, but I stopped for a year so I am refreshing on everything. This is definitely not absolute beginner. Even at my level I missed some things.
this is not for absolute beginners but ive been trying to learn korean for about a year and this is so useful !! i kinda understand written korean but i have troubles with understanding spoken korean so this video helped me a lot. its surprising but i understood at least 70% of the video ksjdj
This video is very useful though it's not absolute beginner level. I have been learning Korean for like 6 months now, but I need to listen more than 3 times to understand all of them! I hope there will be more videos like this coming in the future. Korean listening skill is quite challenging to those who have just started for a short period of time.
This is some amazing content, I don't really get it when they talk quickly but when it slows down it gets better. It's aesthetically pleasing, well-thought out, and very useful for various types of beginner. Cheers!
I've been learning Korean since August 2018, so just about 4 months. This video is great for listening practice. I only got one answer incorrect. For the last three scenarios I closed my eyes so I didn't visually see the options to choose from. I owe all my Korean knowledge to the Lingodeer app. I've learned so much in such a short time with that app. I wish I had the app 8 years ago when I was learning Japanese. Good luck with your studies guys.
I'm still on level 1, so i have no confidence to watch videos without subtitles or read articles in korean. But i'm suprised that I understand most of the conversations in this video. Thank you so much! I built my confidence to watch videos without subtitles and I'll speak to korean people from now on to practice. 정말 감사합니다~ 💜
OMG. I didn’t study Korean seriously. I’m just watching a lot Korean dramas and movies. And I’m so surprise because I can answer almost right. I’m not totally get all the question. So yah, K-dramas are amazingly useful 😂😂
@@lilc0ffee893 I could be wrong, but I thought that that was the way to say "Excuse me" when you are trying to get someone's attention, and if you bumped into someone and said that, it could be taken as rude???
A tip- if you're somewhat of a beginner like me you'll find that it's a LOT easier to understand if you play it at 0.5x speed, as they do talk kind of fast
i have never actually studied the vocabulary, only letters and grammar so most of the vocab i know is from the type of entertainment i watch so this was quite easy for me to understand as i got everything right ! thank you, this actually helped me understand how much i’ve learnt so far !
I understood about 70% of this just from watching Running Man and Korean dramas for 3 years Never picked up a book just google translate and that's it. It's possible guys
I felt a bit bad about myself at first, but I'm so glad I read the comments saying this is definitely not for absolute beginners. I've been studying Korean for about 6 months and I need to hear every exercise at least 5 times before I can try to answer.
I listened to this a few months ago when I was a true beginner and understood almost nothing. I listened to it again (about half a year into self-studying Korean) and literally understood every single thing without the subtitles. I wouldn't say it's for absolute beginners so if you're an absolute beginner and don't understand, don't feel discouraged! Give it some time (and study!) then come back to it. 화이팅!
i feel so proud of myself as i’ve never had any proper korean lessons but understood the whole thing without difficulty T^T Thanks for the check and the material
Was frustrated when I first watched this, but a few months later with a lot more practice, It is definitely much simpler. I agree with others that this isn't for absolute beginners, but it isn't super complicated and a great video for those who have been studying for a little bit. Really nice format too with the pictures!
I have made myself familiar with the language for three years now but i never actually studied it so i am kinda proud that i got the gist out of each of these plots and a lot of correct answers even though i dont know many verbs :)
Thanks for posting this. I know most of these words, but I have a lazy ear. Listening to these lessons a few more times will help me understand more of it!
This is definitely for beginners, you just have to know basic grammar structure and use it to learn the vocabulary and learn how to form sentences correctly. This is my favorite way to learn because you are learning many things at once and see how words are used in everyday conversations, but judging by the comments a lot of people like more textbook style teaching.
I only got 5 wrong. Very proud of myself. I am a high intermediate so I’m not surprised but then again I am bc I don’t practice my listening very much, thank god for me knowing a lotttttt of vocabulary and understanding the grammar completely.
For those that do not understand why this video is for beginners, I think it is for beginners because it puts you in the position of a child who is learning a language for the first time. Someone who is a beginner should listen for familiar words, and also listen to this multiple times trying to hear familiar words each time related to each topic. This isn't to teach you a set of words or phrases in one sitting, but to practice comprehension of listening.
Maybe because I've watched korean dramas since I was 10 years old (despite being an islander), surprisingly I understood what they said from my years of watching korean dramas and listening to kpop and ost songs/ indie korean music.
Ive been learning for 7 months (im not counting the other two months since i was on and off) and this makes sense but this isnt for like absolute complete beginners After a year and 6 ish months this is easy as bread lil
I could understand a basic summary, enough to get the answers right. However, I still don't know enough vocabulary or grammar that was included in this lesson. I will keep studying!
I only know a few words, even though, despite that, I could get some of the questions right, I have a long way to go and learn Korean, but I never thought I could get some of them right, very useful, not that Beginner level thought, however, I really liked it!
Been seriously studying for less than a month but could understood almost everything (at least 90%). Some specific words like sugar and flour slipped but I still understood the gist of the conversation and got all but one question correct. Is this beginner like the title says or upper beginner as most of the comments seem to suggest?
Well one thing is I think my listening skills improved because I can some of the words but I can't answer the questions correctly because I still get lost in translation but I hope I can become 100 percent interactive some day by listening to this everyday, but I wouldn't call this absolute begginer
I can't believe that I find this very easy, when I didn't master English yet 🙂💔 I am struggling with the language I need, and enjoying in the language that I really don't need! 😂 I would like to thank my oppas, unnies "Idols" , Runningman, Knowing brother and K-drama 😂💔
I got full score, however its a little bit difficult for beginners as there are some intermediate expressions but still worth trying it. Although it is not absolute beginner.
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I have been studying Korean for two years and begin an intermediate course next year. While this video is useful for me it is definitely not "absolute beginner" level.
true
LMAO RIGHT WTF
So frustrating...😑
Korean kids learn English as the same level as those conversation in their 14 years old.
yeah, I am kinda of absolute beginner, started korean 2 month ago and this is defenetely not absolute beginner
I thought "absolute beginner" would mean: "Someone who has no idear about Korean, but knows some words" and not: "You are actually sitting in Korea now, ordered a meal in a restaurant in Korean and don't know how to buy a car or get a Job in Korea" -.-
HAHAHAHA thats me right now - i'm in korea for exchange and i can order a meal in restaurant but my korean knowledge isnt enough for me to understand what people are saying in the lift. This one is definitely an upper beginners though, i had to listen 3 times to catch the vocab and realise what they are saying
AHAHA XD
BIG FAT MOOD OMG.
Lol
Gosh yes!!! This is no way absolute beginner!!
Very useful, thank you! Not really 'absolute beginner' material though, more like upper beginner level.
U
I
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this is absolute beginners? than what am i? TT
You will quickly be able to catch on with some consistency.
ItsMe Annika youre not even born yet
Onlything I can say in Korean is: "Hello. My name is (name). Nice to meet you!", "Very nice swimmingpool", "I am German", "You're an idiot/ Yo're stupid!" and "Stop it!"... and than I know some random words like: radio, banana, so, gae, maekju, soju, pang, bang and I can count to 5 in both countingsystems... ah this video confused me as I klicked on it. I thought it will come up an audio oor something where you see 3 ways to write and have to guess which is right and than they show you if your right and what it means^^
Once you Jimin you can't Jimout! Very nice swimming pool 😂
Once you Jimin you can't Jimout! I can say 'Hello. My name is Kyla. Bangtan Sonyeondan. Bang bang bang. Point, aim, shoot. My blood, sweat, and tears. I miss you.'
edit: 2 months later and i can count to 3, say 'stop', 'fool', 'yes/no', 'please/thank you', 'forget it', 'as if it's the last', 'i don't want to cry', 'i like you', and 'Cleopatra: the world's best potato chip'.
edit: over a year later and i still haven't made progress but wow was i sooo cringey back when i was a new army 😂. i understand so much more - i just need to learn the vocab but i'm recognizing the sentence structure and such.
I listened to this video about half a year ago and it was so hard but I decided randomly to come back to it and it was so easy that I didn’t even have to try 😂 I hope that gives you guys confidence to keep studying haha 너무 쉽네~~ 이 비디오를 6개월 전에 들었는데 그땐 너무 어려웠어.... 근데 이제 이해가 났어
For how long have you been studying/learning korean?
'이해가 됐어' 가 더 정확합니다. 그래도 한국말 너무 잘하시네요~
@@Ocoromusic what 😢😢😢
@@zippyyourmouthy1587 I, for some reasons, just went out of my way and help Lauryn D with the Korean sentence they wrote. I'm sorry to have confused you!
@@Ocoromusic do you know Korean 😆😆
It's like low intermediate. If you could understand the things they say, but couldn't know some words like i couldn't, then you should work on stuff like colors, numbers, clock, food, etc. I got the sentence patterns but i couldn't understand what they're exactly talking about. I was just suggesting. 😅 But this is a nice and fun way to study!
Same... 😂😂
Haha I'm the opposite! I understand some key words and just a little bit of the sentence structure but can't form sentences >
omg same
나도이렇게 생각했는데요
@@BorahB 네 나도 같은생각입니다 이거겠지
Just for context, guys, I've been self studying Korean for around 6 months and I understand around 90-95% of this video. When I first watched it I understood pretty much nothing. I should also point out I've listened to this video probably around 100-200 times over the past 6 months (without reading any of the translations, English or Korean - JUST listening) and slowly picked up a word or two used in the video each time I listened. On the segments where I just can't figure out what the hell they're saying, I'll come back and read the translations (the male voice actor talks a lot faster than the woman and he sometimes slurs words like 토요일 and 시작 etc). If you're new to Korean, don't let the title mislead you - this is NOT for absolute beginners. It took me 6 months to get to this level. Just know that if you keep at it and don't expect too much too quickly, you will get the most out of this video.
What do you do or use to study Korean besides this video?
@@mimihua2 I have Korean dialogues recorded that I listen to when I can for listening practice. I'll also use flash cards not just for individual words but for sentence fragments and full sentences. For me it's more of a hobby than anything so I dont study very intensely and have no speaking practice, but I'd also recommend any platform where you can practice speaking to natives.
@@IllegalInAmsterdam Thanks.
Where do you find the translations?
I´m glad you say that because I also rewinded the video to find out what he was saying when he said 토요일. It sounded not as I would expect the word to sound like. But I´m so happy that at least I understood the written version :) And yes, I´ve been studying hard during the last 3-4 months and still there are new words. I´d say it´s rather a B1/B2 level than A0/1. I maen making appointments at the hospital and stuff like that is my goal. It´s very advanced I´d say.
Beginner level would be things like "how are you?", "what are your hobbies", "the weather is nice", "I have a sister and two cats" ...
I am upper beginner in Korean. This was hard, though.
como va tu coreano? han pasado 3 años
After 5 months of studying Korean, I'm so proud of myself for understanding almost everything ^.^ I'm still having a hard time with numbers tho.
-ps. To everyone who are studying Korean, 화이팅!!!
i thought you said "after 5 minutes" and was so confused
Which textbooks did you use ? TTMIK,YOSEI, EWHA, TUTTLE PUBLISHING, HIPPOCRENE KOREAN FOR BEGINNERS? DID YOU GO TO SCHOOL? TAKE A CLASS ? HAVE A TUTOR? How did you reach this point in five months?
Guys I am Korean and this listening is so bad cuz the tone of conversation is so weird and awkward. And 죄송합니다 is not excuse me. That is I’m sorry
And excuse me is 실례합니다
It depends on the context. She could mean sorry for bugging you, apologetic about asking a question.
@@brookethomas9598 Dude the guy is korean.
Gabriela Velasco bro, there are still different ways to say «excuse me» in korean
Brooke Thomas lol he is korean .,.
right? i was like “what??” cause i though “저기요” was excuse me
Not sure who will see this at this point in the comments, but you can always try listening to it at .75 speed! The difference really helped me.
Thanks
thanks for the tip, going to try it now.
The formatting of this video is fantastic. I'd love to see more videos like this, the audio with the added transcription is really helpful
Awesome video! I think of myself as a high beginner/low intermediate and I understand about 70%+ of each conversation and that's enough to answer everything correctly.
to the people who don’t understand this video, i recommend you to write down the vocabulary you don’t know from this video (when the subtitles come up) and memorise it. listen to the audio everyday and hopefully you guys can understand what is being said. it really helps
Remember watching and struggling with this about two years ago in college. Living in Korea now and this has become childsplay. Quite satisfying! For those of you struggling here, dont give up! Youll get much better someday through your work :)
the only reason i got the first one right is because i picked up 자동차
Same
I am from South Korea. I also practiced listening while studying English, but it is not easy. I understand your situation!
Phew. Glad I’m starting this. Listening comprehension is the one form of studying I really haven’t delved into yet, but it is the most important for actually talking to people. Thank you for this high quality video!
"Absolute beginner?"
You're joking, right?
I couldn't understand the first dadgum sentence.
I honestly thought this was really tough at first, but I keep rewatching it and it’s definitely helping with my listening skills.
I watched this video about 2 months ago and understood nothing, but now I can understand it completely. Definitely not beginner level though lol
3:23 '오늘 문 여는 시간이 어떻게 되나요?' does not mean 'What time do you close today?'
Rather, it means the opposite. So you should say : '오늘 문 닫는 시간이 어떻게 되나요?' or '오늘 몇시까지 문을 여나요? '
Yes, that's been annoying me for ages, haha
Hi Yun Jae,
Thanks for posting, you're right, the more commonly used phrase is 오늘 문 닫는 시간이 어떻게 되나요?' or '오늘 몇시까지 문을 여나요? ', thank you for pointing this out to us.
Cheers,
Team KoreanClass101.com
Nowhere close to beginner ! lol but still great material
사랑해재키와이 OMG R U A JVCKI WAI FAN?
OMG, a few months (I guess 2) I was trying to practice my Korean listening skills and I just had like 2 answers rights, i could catch up some words but I really didn't understand what the girl or the speakers said. But after keeping with my studies I had all my answers rights, even if in my head I couldn't structure the sentence, I did understood the main ideas. I'm so proud of myself. I tell you this so you don´t give up on yourself and your studies. It may be difficult now but if you continue you'll see your progress, just keep going!!!!!!!!
I've been learning korean for over 4 years now, but I stopped for a year so I am refreshing on everything. This is definitely not absolute beginner. Even at my level I missed some things.
I'm learning korean for 2 months now (due to my schedule not regularly tough) and it was really hard. So not really for absolute beginners :(
this is not for absolute beginners but ive been trying to learn korean for about a year and this is so useful !! i kinda understand written korean but i have troubles with understanding spoken korean so this video helped me a lot. its surprising but i understood at least 70% of the video ksjdj
This video is very useful though it's not absolute beginner level. I have been learning Korean for like 6 months now, but I need to listen more than 3 times to understand all of them! I hope there will be more videos like this coming in the future. Korean listening skill is quite challenging to those who have just started for a short period of time.
This is some amazing content, I don't really get it when they talk quickly but when it slows down it gets better. It's aesthetically pleasing, well-thought out, and very useful for various types of beginner. Cheers!
After a year of studying, I can mostly get these correct, but as most people have indicated, this is hardly beginner material.
I think it's high beginner level since I'm at that level and it wasn't too difficult but not too easy either for me
감사합니다! 너무 좋았어요~
This was hard before but now its helpful. This means i progressed. Yay.
I've been learning Korean since August 2018, so just about 4 months. This video is great for listening practice. I only got one answer incorrect. For the last three scenarios I closed my eyes so I didn't visually see the options to choose from. I owe all my Korean knowledge to the Lingodeer app. I've learned so much in such a short time with that app. I wish I had the app 8 years ago when I was learning Japanese. Good luck with your studies guys.
Although this isnt for absolute beginners, it is extremely helpful and well put
I'm still on level 1, so i have no confidence to watch videos without subtitles or read articles in korean. But i'm suprised that I understand most of the conversations in this video. Thank you so much! I built my confidence to watch videos without subtitles and I'll speak to korean people from now on to practice. 정말 감사합니다~ 💜
Very useful. Helped me level up quickly to sentence comprehension.
OMG. I didn’t study Korean seriously. I’m just watching a lot Korean dramas and movies. And I’m so surprise because I can answer almost right. I’m not totally get all the question. So yah, K-dramas are amazingly useful 😂😂
Don't use 죄송합니다 when trying to say excuse me,that's just wrong.
Use 저기요 instead
"실례합니다" could also be used.
저기요 뭐에요?
@@allergictohumansnotanimals5671 it litterally means "excuse me"
@@aftertheoblivion663 아 이해했어요 고마워요~
@@lilc0ffee893 I could be wrong, but I thought that that was the way to say "Excuse me" when you are trying to get someone's attention, and if you bumped into someone and said that, it could be taken as rude???
A tip- if you're somewhat of a beginner like me you'll find that it's a LOT easier to understand if you play it at 0.5x speed, as they do talk kind of fast
i have never actually studied the vocabulary, only letters and grammar so most of the vocab i know is from the type of entertainment i watch so this was quite easy for me to understand as i got everything right ! thank you, this actually helped me understand how much i’ve learnt so far !
I understood about 70% of this just from watching Running Man and Korean dramas for 3 years
Never picked up a book just google translate and that's it.
It's possible guys
but this was like A1 level, there is nothing to brag about
i like it so much! it suits my beginner level. its challenging but not that hard as well. thank you!
I felt a bit bad about myself at first, but I'm so glad I read the comments saying this is definitely not for absolute beginners. I've been studying Korean for about 6 months and I need to hear every exercise at least 5 times before I can try to answer.
Yall are the bestttttttttttttttttt. I literally don't have to playlist this anymore. OMG thank you.
Amazing content! Thank you so much
Wow I actually understood the conversation, The power of vocabulary
wooooow its very nice and helpfull heartly thanks
I listened to this a few months ago when I was a true beginner and understood almost nothing. I listened to it again (about half a year into self-studying Korean) and literally understood every single thing without the subtitles. I wouldn't say it's for absolute beginners so if you're an absolute beginner and don't understand, don't feel discouraged! Give it some time (and study!) then come back to it. 화이팅!
I opened this and was a bit shocked. I understood most of the first dialogue. YAY!!!
i feel so proud of myself as i’ve never had any proper korean lessons but understood the whole thing without difficulty T^T Thanks for the check and the material
Please make some more videos like this!
Great vid.. as mentioned deffo not beginner. Upper beginner / lower intermediate level. Would reccomend listening at .75 speed.
Sooo lovely calm voices ^~^💞
Was frustrated when I first watched this, but a few months later with a lot more practice, It is definitely much simpler. I agree with others that this isn't for absolute beginners, but it isn't super complicated and a great video for those who have been studying for a little bit. Really nice format too with the pictures!
I have made myself familiar with the language for three years now but i never actually studied it so i am kinda proud that i got the gist out of each of these plots and a lot of correct answers even though i dont know many verbs :)
Yes, thank you for the material! It's very useful and it's hard to find something for beginners :)
Thanks for posting this. I know most of these words, but I have a lazy ear. Listening to these lessons a few more times will help me understand more of it!
This is so helpful. I'm self studying and I understand around 90% of this video. Thank you very much!
I understood only 0.0090% of the video
This is definitely for beginners, you just have to know basic grammar structure and use it to learn the vocabulary and learn how to form sentences correctly. This is my favorite way to learn because you are learning many things at once and see how words are used in everyday conversations, but judging by the comments a lot of people like more textbook style teaching.
Thank you! Спасибо
This Was actually very helpful :D
Out of all questions, I got like 2 mistakes. This is really helpful, considering I've been studying korean for 4 years on my own.
i see that absolute beginner now means level b1. good to know. -_-
i got all perfect thanks you for making this video to practice my listening skills :)
good teacher
I didn’t completely understand questions but I could guess it so I answer correctly almost all the time, thanks for the video~
its cringe when people say ~ after a sentence
Really good
My speaking, reading and writing I would consider lower intermediate. My listening skills are still beginner. Going to work on that now!
Oh my gosh I was not ready for this its so fast 😂😭 ill come back in a few more months
이런 좋은 영상을 올려주셔서 정말 감사합니다!!ㅠ0ㅠ
really help me
Thank you very much for making this video..
Thank you so much
I only got 5 wrong. Very proud of myself. I am a high intermediate so I’m not surprised but then again I am bc I don’t practice my listening very much, thank god for me knowing a lotttttt of vocabulary and understanding the grammar completely.
For those that do not understand why this video is for beginners, I think it is for beginners because it puts you in the position of a child who is learning a language for the first time. Someone who is a beginner should listen for familiar words, and also listen to this multiple times trying to hear familiar words each time related to each topic. This isn't to teach you a set of words or phrases in one sitting, but to practice comprehension of listening.
Great video but definitely upper beginner/lower intermediate level
very good
This is a great video but I don't think this is really for absolute beginners, maybe intermediate level beginners
Maybe because I've watched korean dramas since I was 10 years old (despite being an islander), surprisingly I understood what they said from my years of watching korean dramas and listening to kpop and ost songs/ indie korean music.
Ive been learning for 7 months (im not counting the other two months since i was on and off) and this makes sense but this isnt for like absolute complete beginners
After a year and 6 ish months this is easy as bread lil
Thank you
I could understand a basic summary, enough to get the answers right. However, I still don't know enough vocabulary or grammar that was included in this lesson. I will keep studying!
I only know a few words, even though, despite that, I could get some of the questions right, I have a long way to go and learn Korean, but I never thought I could get some of them right, very useful, not that Beginner level thought, however, I really liked it!
감사합니다
this is so useful 😍
Not for absolute beginners
No where near absolute beginner!!!
...but then they repeat with the hangeul and the English translation. Very helpful!!!
Been seriously studying for less than a month but could understood almost everything (at least 90%). Some specific words like sugar and flour slipped but I still understood the gist of the conversation and got all but one question correct. Is this beginner like the title says or upper beginner as most of the comments seem to suggest?
Well one thing is I think my listening skills improved because I can some of the words but I can't answer the questions correctly because I still get lost in translation but I hope I can become 100 percent interactive some day by listening to this everyday, but I wouldn't call this absolute begginer
Omg, I love it so much that it's kinda scary 😆 I bet we can learn Korean easier now that you have uploaded this video!
I'm at mid beginner level and I found this too hard, only picked up a few words per sentence... TT
I can't believe that I find this very easy, when I didn't master English yet 🙂💔
I am struggling with the language I need, and enjoying in the language that I really don't need! 😂
I would like to thank my oppas, unnies "Idols" , Runningman, Knowing brother and K-drama 😂💔
I got full score, however its a little bit difficult for beginners as there are some intermediate expressions but still worth trying it. Although it is not absolute beginner.
우왕 영어 못해서 힘들었는데 그래도 내가 한국어 한 개는 할 수 있어서 다행이닿ㅎ
이 비디오를 가져 주셔서 감사합니다. 그것은 매우 유용했습니다.
I just recently started learning, but I actually kinda understood the food one!! Definitely none of the others though😂
Thank you i was able to get so answers
1:12
2:13
3:12
I'm proud that i understand without reading the translation ✋😭