Korean Grammar - Lesson 2
Uploader Comments (shinjeongsuh)
Top Comments
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i understand all about 은 and 는!!
thank you very much for your videos ! <3
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OMG YOU ARE MY HERO! .. sigh.. the end is epic
All Comments (24)
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@CupcakexKitty Yep.
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@vkvkvk1219 Ah, I see. So it's an emphasis?
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@CupcakexKitty 은/는 is not even equivalent to the English word 'be', but (이)다 is. That's why i'm saying he's wrong. for example , "You are a person" should be 너는 사람이다. in which 는 does not act the same as 'are' but 이다 does. 는 just indicates that 'you' is the subject.
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@vkvkvk1219 I think he's saying it's the equivalent to the English word 'be'. We don't have 'josa' in English and it would therefore be even more confusing to explain it.
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I think I found my new best friend. I didn't learn this on Rosetta Stone. Thank you very very very very much!!!
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at first it kinda sounded this was part of a porno
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This is wrong. 은/는 does not mean the verb 'be'. They are special grammatical terms called 'josa' in Korean. They make nouns subjects by being attached to them. 나는 should be translated into 'I' in a context of subject.
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ahhahah i like this video . thankx i get it right away . u r so funny n it make me easy to understand hahaha
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cool teacher ^^
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I still can't get it about how to use 은 / 는
Mind explaining it again?
OMO THANK YOU SO MUCH! but i have a question. 은 / 는 is the verb "be" conjugate with the pronouns (He/she/i/you/they/so on) just for pronouns ... i get it?
okwalala 10 months ago
@okwalala yeah it's like "I am", "You are", "He is", "That is", "this is" and so on :) thanks for viewing!
shinjeongsuh 9 months ago
i didn't get about the :
- WITH VOWEL ENDING
- WITHOUT VOWEL ENDING
I meant ( when i have to use those words? )
emma2robert 1 year ago
@emma2robert They are like pronouns, (I am, you are, he/she is, they are etc.) 은 is used when the pronoun following it has a patchim, such as 그들은, where the 들 in 그들 has a patchim. However 는 is used when the pronoun following it has no patchim, such as the 나 in 나는, which ends in just a vowel.
shinjeongsuh 1 year ago 2
@shinjeongsuh so you mean, if the word ends with vowel it is nin. and if it is consonant it is in? am i right?
tandangpato 11 months ago
@tandangpato exactly :)
shinjeongsuh 9 months ago