좋아요 means 'i like' more than it means 'good'
TL Learn Korean Thread - Page 7
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Rekrul
Korea (South)17174 Posts
좋아요 means 'i like' more than it means 'good' | ||
Froadac
United States6733 Posts
On January 10 2012 07:11 Seeker wrote: Any update on when this thing's gonna happen Froadac? Waiting on more responses. tt | ||
Kaladin
United States88 Posts
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B.I.G.
3251 Posts
On January 10 2012 09:42 Kaladin wrote: This might be a stupid question but is there anywhere I could buy korean keycaps for a mechanical keyboard? I have a Razer Blackwidow (cherry blue) if that matters. I would get stickers but the blackwidow has huge font on the keys so i don't think the stickers would work very well as the letters would overlap. dont bother dude, srsly. I printed out an image of korean keyboard layout, used for about 2 hours and then i knew it by heart. Ofc with some trial and error but the lay-out is actually really logical and easy to remember after you used it a couple of times.. on another note, does anyone know this site: http://www.koreanclass101.com/? Ive heard some good things about it, like that it has apps and audio lessons to use on the go, as well as some dialog videos for intermediate learners to pracctice listening to korean as it is spoken IRL, rather then the way the teachers would speak to you (slow, extra pronounciation etc.). However, I dont know if its any good and worth signing up for? (they say its free but i can imagine they have some pay to use content). Edit: If noone knows about the site i'll be the guinea pig and report back here | ||
TheNessman
United States4158 Posts
TL Name: theNessman Skype: xmungam What you know: i took a korean class over the summer but ended up forgetting a lot ;_; . so i know how to read and basic grammar, but my vocab is near 0 Goals: I want to increase my vocabulary and try to engage in some real conversations! Feel free to message me on skype! | ||
Tanner
United States38 Posts
Real name (optional): Tanner Skype: tanner-peterson What you know: Very little. I'm currently in korean 102. I know 아요/어요 conjugation of verbs and a bunch of random verbs/adjectives. Goals: Become fluent! | ||
Nazza
Australia1654 Posts
On January 10 2012 10:16 B.I.G. wrote: dont bother dude, srsly. I printed out an image of korean keyboard layout, used for about 2 hours and then i knew it by heart. Ofc with some trial and error but the lay-out is actually really logical and easy to remember after you used it a couple of times.. on another note, does anyone know this site: http://www.koreanclass101.com/? Ive heard some good things about it, like that it has apps and audio lessons to use on the go, as well as some dialog videos for intermediate learners to pracctice listening to korean as it is spoken IRL, rather then the way the teachers would speak to you (slow, extra pronounciation etc.). However, I dont know if its any good and worth signing up for? (they say its free but i can imagine they have some pay to use content). Edit: If noone knows about the site i'll be the guinea pig and report back here I like it actually. Podcasts are nice to listen to on the bus/train or just whenever. The hosts are entertaining. You can also just sign up for an account and download everything in the first 7 days, so you don't have to pay/subscribe if you don't want to. | ||
stablol
United States82 Posts
On January 10 2012 08:57 Rekrul wrote: what u said would be completely wrong and would sound weird to them but they would still get what u meant 좋아요 means 'i like' more than it means 'good' yep. thats ok to start its like when people speak broken english, still understand. thats ok to start out with to me, but i'd still like to know the correct way ofc. and ye just like "sounds good" - 좋아~ On January 10 2012 10:16 B.I.G. wrote: dont bother dude, srsly. I printed out an image of korean keyboard layout, used for about 2 hours and then i knew it by heart. Ofc with some trial and error but the lay-out is actually really logical and easy to remember after you used it a couple of times.. on another note, does anyone know this site: http://www.koreanclass101.com/? Ive heard some good things about it, like that it has apps and audio lessons to use on the go, as well as some dialog videos for intermediate learners to pracctice listening to korean as it is spoken IRL, rather then the way the teachers would speak to you (slow, extra pronounciation etc.). However, I dont know if its any good and worth signing up for? (they say its free but i can imagine they have some pay to use content). Edit: If noone knows about the site i'll be the guinea pig and report back here ive seen it before, it seems like www.talktomeinkorean.com but less friendly and easy to use. i would recommend ttmik over any other similar site | ||
RGnt
Finland100 Posts
Over all the approach rosetta stone takes it is possibly best software for studying language from ground up. But then again it doesn't fit for people who can't use certain organ of theirs or don't actually buy the software and doesn't bother to look around the software for information (which is usually found from the manual no one reads either). | ||
mtvacuum
United States979 Posts
On January 10 2012 10:16 B.I.G. wrote: dont bother dude, srsly. I printed out an image of korean keyboard layout, used for about 2 hours and then i knew it by heart. Ofc with some trial and error but the lay-out is actually really logical and easy to remember after you used it a couple of times.. on another note, does anyone know this site: http://www.koreanclass101.com/? Ive heard some good things about it, like that it has apps and audio lessons to use on the go, as well as some dialog videos for intermediate learners to pracctice listening to korean as it is spoken IRL, rather then the way the teachers would speak to you (slow, extra pronounciation etc.). However, I dont know if its any good and worth signing up for? (they say its free but i can imagine they have some pay to use content). Edit: If noone knows about the site i'll be the guinea pig and report back here I use both koreanclass101 and TTMIK and suggest you use both as well. TTMIK is great for learning common grammar points while koreanclass101 provides a realistic dialogue to study in each lesson and helps develop vocabulary related to certain situations, while TTMIK kinda just introduces new vocab randomly. | ||
Silentness
United States2821 Posts
Real name: Matt What you know: I know basic Korean and I can hold small conversations with strangers. Goals: Become fluent in Korean so I can understand my wife when she curses at me in Korean. Also her mom loves me to death so it would be great to actually have a deep conversation with her one day. Also how many black people do you know that are fluent in Korean haha? I'm always down for answering any questions if it's basic Korean or any culture related questions. Learning Korean would be a really rewarding experience. I always feel happy when I have a conversation in Korean to Korean people and I don't have to say it two or three times because I either pronounced it wrong or my western accent flooded my speech. | ||
Escoffier
United States120 Posts
is there some rule or do I have to memorize all the exceptions | ||
kestry
United States4 Posts
What you know: Konglish (Pororo level vocab. Korean speaking level is not very good. And writing is 똥. Recently leveled up reading speed to be a bit faster than a 5 year old. Goals: Fluency! Increase vocabulary.... Want to be able to have natural conversations with my boyfriend and his Korean friends. And understand TV shows and SC2 commentators and would be nice to use Naver for my questions and recipe needs. Hi, learnkorean.com has a nice and quick breakdown of the pronunciation rules on Lesson 1-3. (complex final consonant excerpt): NB) Final consonant clusters: ㄳ, ㄵ, ㄶ, ㄺ, ㄻ, ㄼ, ㄽ, ㄾ, ㄿ, ㅀ, ㅄ Except for ㄺ, ㄻ, ㄼ, ㄽ, ㄾ, ㄿ, ㅀ (ones with ㄹ placed befre another consonant), when followed by another consonant or nothing, the second consonant of the cluster becomes silent. This second consonant will come alive when there is a vowel after it. 값 = kap "price" 값 + 과 = kap kwa "price and" 값 + 이 = kapsi "price (with a subject particle)" | ||
dearyuna
United States322 Posts
Real name (optional) - yuna Skype - yunafishy How are you fluent - pretty fluent. Korean background. What help are you willing to offer - I'm not very proactive in the sense to design lessons or give formal grammar lessons, but can answer general questions. | ||
ZwuckeL
Germany563 Posts
why is it written 데스티니 instead of 뎃티니 and why is it 토드 instead of 톧 ? How do you decide if you need the second consonant with ㅡ or just write it in the single syllable? thanks | ||
Benga
Korea (South)471 Posts
On January 11 2012 07:59 ZwuckeL wrote: i have seen Destiny and ToD on the korean realm. why is it written 데스티니 instead of 뎃티니 and why is it 토드 instead of 톧 ? How do you decide if you need the second consonant with ㅡ or just write it in the single syllable? thanks wow,im korean and i never thought of things like this before | ||
ZwuckeL
Germany563 Posts
On January 11 2012 08:01 Benga wrote: wow,im korean and i never thought of things like this before but there must be some kind of rule right? i ve often seen the single syllable with ㅡ where it could be added to the character before | ||
Pokebunny
United States10654 Posts
On January 11 2012 08:05 ZwuckeL wrote: but there must be some kind of rule right? i ve often seen the single syllable with ㅡ where it could be added to the character before Yeah, I see it a lot too... I guess it's because the ending consonants are more emphasized in english than korean? not sure.. | ||
Tanner
United States38 Posts
On January 11 2012 07:59 ZwuckeL wrote: i have seen Destiny and ToD on the korean realm. why is it written 데스티니 instead of 뎃티니 and why is it 토드 instead of 톧 ? How do you decide if you need the second consonant with ㅡ or just write it in the single syllable? thanks When a consonant comes last (batchim 받침) it makes a different sound. Like how you put 뎃 that would be said the same as 뎃, 뎆 , and so on ('det' romanized) so it would be dettini instead of desutini or tot instead of todu. ㄱ, ㅋ, ㄲ Batchims have the ㄱ sound value ㄴ has ㄴsound value ㄷ, ㅅ, ㅈ, ㅊ, ㅌ, ㅎ, ㅆ have ㄷsound value ㄹ has ㄹ sound value ㅁ has ㅁ sound value ㅂ and ㅍ have ㅂsound value ㅇ has ㅇ sound value (ng when batchim) They have a slight pronunciation difference they are batchims. | ||
SoraLimit
Canada747 Posts
On January 11 2012 07:59 ZwuckeL wrote: i have seen Destiny and ToD on the korean realm. why is it written 데스티니 instead of 뎃티니 and why is it 토드 instead of 톧 ? How do you decide if you need the second consonant with ㅡ or just write it in the single syllable? thanks I'm not sure if this is correct, but with the second option for both, the ㅅand ㄷ would have a "t" sound, which is different to what it sounds like if it was in the beginning of the syllable, which would sound even less like the original. (De-seu-ti-ni vs Det-ti-ni). | ||
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