Sunday, November 30, 2014

Korean Learn (Level 3 part 15) [geureomyeon-in that case]



안녕하세요!
Welcome back to another lesson on conjunctions!
Today we are introducing a conjunction that means “in that case” or “if so”.

그러면 [geu-reo-myeon] = in that case, if so, then

Do you remember -(으)면?

Sunday, October 26, 2014

Korean Learn (Level 3 part 14)


In the previous lesson, we looked at how to conjugate descriptive verbs and make adjectivesin Korean. You are now familiar with the fact that Korean and English have different systemswhen it comes to using adjectives. But that’s not it. In this lesson, let us look at how to makeadjectives out of verbs.

Again, “adjectives” are a part of speech that modifies nouns (usually) in front of them (i.e.“good” in “good idea” and “awesome” in “awesome music”). And in Korean, not only descriptiveverbs but also “action verbs” can be used as adjectives, or more precisely, used in the form ofadjectives.

Example of descriptive verbs used as adjectives

Nice person (nice + person)
= descriptive verb 좋다 +

Korean Learn (Level 3 part 13)


Korean and English are different in many ways, but one of the key differences is that in Korean, “adjectives” also take the form of “verbs”. For example, if you say “beautiful” in English, that isan adjective and you can look it up in the dictionary, but in Korean, you can only find 예쁘다

Korean Learn (Level 3 part 12) [그래도 - geu-rae-do]


We have introduced a few different conjugations so far through our previous lessons, and todaywe have one more interesting conjugation word to introduce.

The word is 그래도 [geu-rae-do].

(In Level 2 Part 3, we introduced 그래서 [geu-rae-seo],

Indonesian Talk In Korean (level 1-19)



kita kan belajar mengatakan KAPAN dlm bahasa korea. juga bagaimana menjawab beberapa pertanyaan yang berhubungan dengan KAPAN

언제 (eonje) = kapan


tak seperti 어디

"The Burning Seoul" - chapter 5 : "Please Stay life Hyeong"



cast :

- Kim A-Ra
- YouKyoung (AOA)
- Jung Yong Hwa (CN Blue)
- Lee JongHyun (CN Blue)
- Lee JungShin (CN Blue)
- Kang Min Hyuk (CN Blue)
- AOA Members
- Another cast

genre :
fun, semi real.

Author :
SoYoung

type :
series

this is just a fan fiction not a reality...... but some of the situation and place are based on reality... have a nice time to read.... ^_^ Hope u like it

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Drrrttttt……. Drrrrttttt………dddrrrtttttttt

Sesangeseonaboda yeppeun
Sesangeseo naboda chakhan
Geureon yeojan dasin ne insaenge eobseo
Jeongsincharyeo baboya

"hm…..where is my phone?" A-ra mumbled when she know that her

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Indonesian Talk In Korean (level 1-18) [partikel penanda lokasi]



kita pernah belajar 2 partikel penanda sebelumnya yaitu partikel penanda topik (PPT) 은 (eun) / 는 (neun) dan partikel penanda subject (PPS) 이 (i) / 가 (ga)

sekarang kita akan belajar 1 partikel penanda lagi yaitu partikel

Korean Learn (Level 3 part 11) [ㅂ irregular]



You have learned a lot about Korean verbs so far - conjugations, rules, etc. But just like manyother languages, Korean has some irregularities as well, which people started using more andmore often so they have become a fixed rule now.

Korean has much fewer verb irregularities than some other languages do, but you will encounter these irregularities everywhere as you learn and speak Korean. We would like tointroduce one of them in this lesson.

ㅂ irregular

This mean that if verbs have ㅂ at the end of their verb stems, and they are followed by a suffixthat starts with a vowel, the ㅂ part will change to

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Korean Learn (Level 3 part 10) [before -ing]



In this part, we are going to learn how to say “before -ing” in Korean. As with many Korean expressions and prepositions, the order is the opposite from English. In English, the word“before” goes before the clause or the word, but in Korean this part goes after.

The key letter here is 전 [ jeon]. The Chinese character for 전 is 前 and it means “before,” “front,”or “earlier”. To this noun, you add the particle -에 [-e] to make it a preposition.


전에 = before (+ noun)

수업 전에 [su-