Added: 4 years ago
From: koreanclass101
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  • My Hand Hurts Cuz I Wrote them All xD

  • 감사함니다. 나는 한국말 사랑함니다!

  • cute - 귀 엽 다 .... i use google translate and it says ear 귀 lobe 엽 all 다 ? i dont get it?!  and how do u pronounce it?

  • @PRIRUBY Hello. You can say 귀엽다 to mean 'It's cute'. The pronunciation is 'Gwi-yeop-da'(Formal romanization) or 'Giyopda'(Actual Pronunciation)

  • @koreanclass101 ohh ok thank u so much :)

  • From baby to korean...Oh well that was good i can read korean. And i was reading along with him. Pretty gooood 8D

  • xp

    

  • thanks very much

  • Wow, very good:).

    II desu.

    C'est bon.

  • @Maniaclaughter desu is japanese.... did you mean ichiban desu?

  • it's too fast..=(

  • @Steafonn Lol....there are so man of those lessons out there man..this is def advanced vocab...I suggest getting a workbook to learn. I've just gone through the first chapter and I can read Korean!

  • @Steafonn

    They have other videos that teach that. You just happened upon this one. Please be more respectful.

  • umm whats the point of this video? is it supose to build your vocabulary? o-o i dont really get it

  • @d0tm0nster it's supposed to.. it's a word relay, as the title says, to easily remember Korean words through association..

  • this is great !!! love the concept!

  • awww :)) gomawo!

  • so funny!! there almost the same!! i like korean!

  • oh nice kk

  • amazing wow :D

  • Now as a Korean teacher teaching others the words of this relay, where would you take this lesson from here? Would there be a prelistening or reading activity that focuses how to use these words in context? What level would your students be? Make your lessons interesting.

  • Some words are hokkien and english transliteration.

  • Some of the korean words also sound a bit like chinese words too. :P xD

  • @xxsweetheartxx16 it's because Korean vocabulary consists of both native and sino Korean words. Sino Korean words are derived from Chinese characters like 70 percent of English words from Latin.

  • so easy!!! komapsumnida!!! btw does anyone know about the double vowel thing like he did in "date"?

  • Eeh this was cool lol

  • this helps a lot

    감 사 합 니 다 :)thx

  • yea u should have some example but awsome

  • it should have something showing us how to say it

    EXAMPLE--------->chuum bek kessumnida ( how do you do)----안녕하세요

    sumthing like that

    anyways thanx haha....

  • what is pretty and how are you in korean?

  • yippeuda - pretty

    annyeong hasimnikka? - how are you

  • ahh hehe kamsahamnida.. LOL ^^

    hmm.. what about the im fine thank you? hehe

  • Annyeong Haseyo in korea is greeting, and also means have a nice day.. Annyeong Hassimnikka is also a greeting but in the form of asking the person if how is he.. so sometimes, when two persons meet, they greet each other with 'annyeong haseyo'..

    but if a persons tells you this " Annyeong Haseyo, oddoke chinaesseo? " which means, Good Day, are you doing good? then you might answer back, " ne, chal chinaeseo." this is kinda informal.:))

    kekeke.. :]] but i think this might help.. :)

  • it is "ye" i believe.

  • how do you say cute in korean?

    it kind of sounds like ca yu ta or something...

  • cute in korean is " ki - yop - ta "

  • its coolll...

    thanks ;)

  • Isn't "약속 (Promise)" "약속해요"

  • yea.

  • it's the same.. appointment and promise, are both 'yaksok' in korea.

  • Just like the japanese, yakusoku. And jikan (time). I didn't thought korean and japanese actually had words that sounded almost the same.

  • there are words in korea that are also used in japan. :]

  • I like this word relay and I can memorise all the "related words".

    Thanks

  • i remember yaksokdwen sigani lol...

    hahahha

    from the lyrics of haengbok by super juniors.. (oringilly by H.O.T)

  • do you know where can i learn korean online

    translate from english to korean

    and in word

    like

    older sister ---> Noona

    hello --> annyoung

  • i think hello is anyeong

  • okay...

  • nuna is only used by the boys who called their older sister..

    for girls it is unnie

    you can learn korean by searching korean travel phrases..

  • Comment removed

  • thanks

    yeah i know what those words mean

    oppa omma appa

    grandma

    hello bye thank you thanks

    it's just an example of what i was trying to say

    but thanks for "korean travel phrases"

  • your welcome..^^

  • In Korean (Spelled wrong on perpose) Hello is Ah-Neeung-Ha-Say-Yo, but can you just say Ah-Neeung??? Thats easier lol

  • I'ts like a shortcut like when we say in english greetings good morning you can say "morning and the person understood what you mean.(I think???)

  • 'an-nyung' >> when u say hello to friends

    'an-nyung-ha-say-yo' >> when u say hello to older man or say hello politely.

  • Technically, an nyung is informal and an nyung ha say yo is formal. So technically, if you have a friend who's not very close you can still say an nyung ha say yo. It doesn't really have anything to do with younger or older people. It kinda depends on like manners and how close you are with someone.

  • actually, the "annyeonghaseyo" is casual form ("요" or YO form) which means in the middle of formal form and informal form (mostly used).

  • I thought anyeong is for when you are talking to some one you are very close with? cuz it's quite informal

  • thanks , i like the video -- many useful words ^^

  • there were many words that is just straight English XD nice!!

  • hhahaha, nice!!!!!!

  • the korean word for time is really similar to the japanese word

  • if you think ji kan and shi kan is similar, what about the words that have exaclty the same pronounciation?

  • well, the chinese word for time is shi jian... and a good amount of korean and japanese words are derived from chinese words (not all, notice how i said "a good amount")

  • The word for promise Yaksok is also similar to Japanese yakusoku.

  • if you guys think japanese and chinese mandarin is similar, think cantonese-- si kan, nearly exactly the same. Tea for korean, mandarin, cantonese are all same pronunciation.

  • yea that's so interesting...after watching the video i realised it too ^^

    and also there's quite alot of kanji written in the same way as chinese words d:

  • There is no Kanji or Chinese in this video... Its all Korean... Some symbols might be the same, but Korean is a alphebet system, not like Kanji or Chinese writting.

  • G R E A T !!

  • thanks really helpful!!

  • ㅋㅋㅋ... I'm looking into Korean culture to decipher whether i want to learn Korean or Chinese.

    so far I've gotten to in a conversation

    안녕 - hello said to a freind

    잘지내 - all going well

    응- yes

  • that's how i have gotten

  • if you are looking for something easier to learn, try korean; there are more 'original words' in chinese, which differs from korean's way of heavily borrowing a lot from english and chinese

  • cool!!

  • is it hangukmal or hangulkeol?

  • hangukmal..hangeul is written korean

  • Wait... are these the actual pronouncation words? Lol there so close to english... This is amazing to me for some odd reason xD

  • WOWOWOWOW

    thanks for this!

    i love kpod101. ahahaha

  • oh! this method is great! and very fast!(:Thank you!(:

  • WOW! That's a great studying tool! Make it more often!

  • Thanks! We'll keep making these :D

  • 네, 이것은 방법보다 쉬워요.

    감사합니다~! ^^

  • 감사합니다. 한국어 공부 열심히 하세요! 화이팅!

  • Thank you! :-) We'll keep making these.

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