I've been studying Korean on and off since my 8th grade and Im in my 11th rite now. and i know how to pronounce my Hangul and to write but not to translate accurately in English. but if u gave me something in hangul could pronounce it in korean. but not in english
If you know the basic Korean, I'd like to recommend check more lessons from our website at Koreanclass101,com We post basic level Korean lessons on the Youtube, so it doen't have many Hangul texts. Please let me know if you have any questions. Thank you!
needa is more like a suffix at the end of the sentence for the be-verb (ex. my name is.... he is kind, etc). i don't know what you mean by O but yo is a suffix for polite form sentences (mostly questions or agreeing comments)
komawuo is a less polite form. mostly for your friends or ppl who are younger or who you know a lot. kamsahapnida is a polite form used for ppl older than you
I have a question: I noticed that whenever you said something was fried, you would put the word fried behind the actual food. In Korean, do you put the adjective behind the word it modifies, like in French?
OMG!!! i love mandu twigim!! one of my favorite foods!!*stomach growl*....i am really hungry now..thx for the lesson it was excellent and c'est super!!(french for it is super)
you are really great, but when person just get started learnig and when hear all sentence (and so fast) in korean without telling what it means it can be difficult... but the atmospfere is nice when I hear you guys! I love your lessons(: oh! the method to tell vocabulary... is great! I'm glad that you tell one word many time!(: ah! Thank you(:
I've been studying Korean on and off since my 8th grade and Im in my 11th rite now. and i know how to pronounce my Hangul and to write but not to translate accurately in English. but if u gave me something in hangul could pronounce it in korean. but not in english
godanmit 1 month ago
@godanmit Hello. I'm Jay from Koreanclass101,com
If you know the basic Korean, I'd like to recommend check more lessons from our website at Koreanclass101,com We post basic level Korean lessons on the Youtube, so it doen't have many Hangul texts. Please let me know if you have any questions. Thank you!
koreanclass101 1 month ago
only learned 50%...most of the time they're talking to themselves....~.~.....
lifeborder 1 year ago
Hello~ I'm here to learn Korean because I love Korean language. Err, here is the feedback from me about this video.
Some of the sentences that are shown, are not translated in English. Or maybe not clear?
I really appreciate your videos. It helps me a lot in learning Korean! Thank you very much! =)
jianguang91 1 year ago
5:19 ttokpokki
Casshern 1 year ago
what does she say at 1:00?
franciscobarril 2 years ago
As clear as mud
blade004 2 years ago
the always say to-say-O and Nee-da (sry i stink at korean) but anyways wat does that mean?
junerosie321 2 years ago
needa is more like a suffix at the end of the sentence for the be-verb (ex. my name is.... he is kind, etc). i don't know what you mean by O but yo is a suffix for polite form sentences (mostly questions or agreeing comments)
tokee1234567 2 years ago
Makes me hate NORTH korea more...I want street food...but i can't go to South Korea anymore (유_유)
XxAsianLoverxX 2 years ago
i'm wondering what's the difference between kumowo<<(spelling's incorrect?) and kamsahamnida?????
awuuawoo 2 years ago
i think "Kamsahamnida" is much more polite than Komawa(?) :]
kat33ovrcst 2 years ago
yes. its true gomawo(?), is like to say thank you to a friend and kansahamnida is more polite.
nualvarado 2 years ago
kumowo is informal copare to kamsahamnida
AyaDoll 2 years ago
komawuo is a less polite form. mostly for your friends or ppl who are younger or who you know a lot. kamsahapnida is a polite form used for ppl older than you
tokee1234567 2 years ago
I'm hungry now....haha
I have a question: I noticed that whenever you said something was fried, you would put the word fried behind the actual food. In Korean, do you put the adjective behind the word it modifies, like in French?
ellooellooo 3 years ago 2
"fried" that comes after names of foods isn't an adjective. in Korean, adjectives generally come before words.
luv2sd 3 years ago
Oh... my.. word. Now I'm starving. Man, Korean food sure beats what I normally see..
KanaTheStrange 3 years ago
haha
ghosthunters88 2 years ago
IT HELPED A LOT!! THANK YOU!!!!
dbsk31 3 years ago
OMG!!! i love mandu twigim!! one of my favorite foods!!*stomach growl*....i am really hungry now..thx for the lesson it was excellent and c'est super!!(french for it is super)
ixkaiix808 3 years ago
Merci pour le commentaire ! :) 고맙습니다!
koreanclass101 3 years ago
Hehe you know French to!!!!~ you making me really happy right now..lol
ixkaiix808 3 years ago 4
I'm glad that you are studying Korean, too! Moi aussi, je suis tres ravi que vous etudiez le coreen. :)
koreanclass101 3 years ago
@koreanclass101 how many languages do you know. I am inspired
MonaeJohnson 1 year ago 5
It's 1 a.m.... 너무 패고파... ㅠ_ㅠ
sierraskye 3 years ago
you are really great, but when person just get started learnig and when hear all sentence (and so fast) in korean without telling what it means it can be difficult... but the atmospfere is nice when I hear you guys! I love your lessons(: oh! the method to tell vocabulary... is great! I'm glad that you tell one word many time!(: ah! Thank you(:
Gryzek5 4 years ago 2
Gosh..i'm so hungry now..i want some tteokbokki ...^^ very good lesson
PurpleBi 4 years ago
Thank you :D 떡볶이 is sooo good, right? :D
koreanclass101 4 years ago
I just got to korea. These are very helpful for finding out what I like to eat :)
nrowland1001 4 years ago 3
Thanks! How's your life in Korea going so far? :-) 화이팅!!
koreanclass101 4 years ago