🇰🇷 6 things i wish i knew BEFORE learning Korean

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  • čas přidán 5. 06. 2024
  • 안녕하세,유~! 안녕하세요~! Hey, you! It's Natalia and I'm here to encourage you to believe in your ability to learn Korean~! Today I want to talk about the top 6 things I wish I knew before I started learning Korean!
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Komentáře • 4,8K

  • @KoreanLetsGo
    @KoreanLetsGo Před 3 lety +18608

    hi Korean here hahaha
    Yeah I haven't heard anybody saying "당신" as "you" in conversation hahaha
    If you're saying "you" to an older brother, you say "오빠(oppa or obba ㅡ it sounds somewhere between p & b)" if you are a girl, or "형(hyeong)" if you are a boy.
    And if you are saying "you" to an older sister, you say "언니(onnie)" if you are a girl, or "누나(nuna)" if you are a boy.
    (if you know the name of them, better to say their name before saying either 오빠, 형, 언니, or 누나. There is no problem when you call them without their names, but they might be confused if you only call them by 오빠/형/언니/누나 without their names if there are a lot of them who are older than you hahaha ㅡ they all might think you are calling them or calling somebody except him/her since there are too many people in that range.)
    And if you are calling "you" to the ones in the same age (or position) to you or younger, you can just say their name or say "너(neo)" (너 is used in casual conversation) but we usually call their names.
    (all of them above are informal except 당신) ㅡ 당신 is used only between spouses (however, even between spouses, they don't usually use 당신 to each other. It looks super formal LOL), but if you can hear this from the conversation between not spouses, it can also mean that the one who is using the word is angry at the other. It's something like you say super polite when you are angry at another person with -sarcasm(?)- . But many Koreans will understand non-Korean saying this word when you speak to Koreans because we also know that this word is written in so many Korean textbooks for foreigners. However, it's a fact that it sounds somewhat awkward. When you see the word 당신 in a lyric, poem, etc stuff, I think it really means "you" (without anger or anything, but still formal). (summary for this paragraph: 당신 IS SSSSUUPPEEEEEEEEEEEERRRRRRRRRR FORMAL SO IT'S HARD TO SEE KOREANS CALLING EACH OTHER USING THIS WORD, but there are some different nuances coming from the situation that word is used.) ㅡ as I mentioned at the beginning, I haven't heard anybody calling another person as 당신 in 'real-life conversation'.
    There are also some cases you don't have to mention "you" in the sentence for example when you and the one you are talking to are the only people there.
    It’s smth like in conversation, “저기 갈래?” = “Wanna go there?”. The sentence already implies that you are talking to another person without need of mentioning “you” in the sentence.
    If you are in a school or a company, you can call the ones who are above your position as "선배(님)(seonbae(nim))", or just call their position in the company. ㅡ formal
    When you call a teacher, you can call them "선생님(seonseangnim)"(

    • @twentyone2187
      @twentyone2187 Před 3 lety +477

      I want To learn 😅

    • @KoreanLetsGo
      @KoreanLetsGo Před 3 lety +390

      twentyone 21
      hello :D
      I can answer some questions you ask about Korean :)
      what do you want to know?

    • @twentyone2187
      @twentyone2187 Před 3 lety +293

      @@KoreanLetsGo thank you !
      I really want to learn conversational Korean but don't know how because I learned English by talking to people like my friends because obviously most of ppl know English but in the case of Korean I couldn't find any so is another way like a channel you would recommend or a Korean show ?

    • @twentyone2187
      @twentyone2187 Před 3 lety +61

      @@KoreanLetsGo is there*

    • @KoreanLetsGo
      @KoreanLetsGo Před 3 lety +260

      there are a lot of Korean celebrities like K-Pop idols (BTS, Blackpink, etc) having their official vlogs in “Vlive”

  • @user-ru4ek9ts8r
    @user-ru4ek9ts8r Před 3 lety +14383

    guys don’t give up... as a Korean, I think Korean lauguage is the easiest language and the most confusing language at the same time ,,

    • @abidahusen5408
      @abidahusen5408 Před 3 lety +875

      Ughh someone teach me Korean already literally struggling 😭😂

    • @user-ru4ek9ts8r
      @user-ru4ek9ts8r Před 3 lety +404

      @@abidahusen5408 I love your patience ❤️🥺 I’m not really good at english but I’ll answer if you ask anything!!🙏

    • @Slay999
      @Slay999 Před 3 lety +271

      @@abidahusen5408 same😭 learning the language (understanding) itself is hard but reading and writing/speaking is easy😩

    • @Ellevillewie
      @Ellevillewie Před 3 lety +48

      Thank you! This girl is just discouraging. Not nice at all!

    • @user-gt5ln1uw7t
      @user-gt5ln1uw7t Před 3 lety +24

      I feel the same thing about English

  • @maeians
    @maeians Před 3 lety +7907

    why do i want to learn Korean even though i can’t even speak *ENGLISH* properly-

    • @someone4434
      @someone4434 Před 3 lety +140

      Same lol

    • @ask4982
      @ask4982 Před 3 lety +203

      Same here, Norwegian learning Japanese through English. We got this though! We get 2 in 1 hehe

    • @ela3755
      @ela3755 Před 3 lety +261

      Same, I'm not a native speaker of English but i'm studing Korean THROUGH English bc there aren't enough sources to learn it in my language so....yeaah we got this

    • @KazKindred613
      @KazKindred613 Před 3 lety +78

      @@ela3755 Ooh your English is really good!! Just two suggestions: put “a” before native and say “learn in my language” instead of “with”. Other than that, it sounds very natural and I couldn’t really tell that you weren’t a native speaker! I’m learning Spanish right now, but I want to finally learn Korean after I reach a good fluency level in Spanish :).

    • @ela3755
      @ela3755 Před 3 lety +33

      @@KazKindred613 thank you so much. I'll keep that in mind and good luck!

  • @liaslife9456
    @liaslife9456 Před 3 lety +5076

    I learned korean and it took me almost 2 years. Heres an advice: it’s confusing so take your time

    • @cloudydaysloveme17
      @cloudydaysloveme17 Před 3 lety +114

      Any advice for pretty much a beginner? I can have small and basic conversations after 2 months and I understand sentence structure well so far to form my own half-hearted ones lol I have been using a Smart Keyboard to become used to how the letters change visually when I form a word but obviously, with long conversations I run out of steam and it’s like my brain can’t pick up where a sentence or topic ended and another began. How do I pick up the pace or slow down so my brain doesn’t jump? And what do you think helped you?

    • @myk1137
      @myk1137 Před 2 lety +55

      The only difficult part is the respect levels for me.All the other parts are almost the same as Turkish but we don't have anything like respect levels in Turkish.

    • @jitensmail7326
      @jitensmail7326 Před 2 lety +5

      @@shinramyeon._ what is ur name on Dulingo I use Dulingo too

    • @MrJason300
      @MrJason300 Před 2 lety +17

      Nearly 4 years for me and it's a slow path forward! I wouldn't say I'm fluent in the slightest.

    • @liaslife9456
      @liaslife9456 Před 2 lety +29

      @@cloudydaysloveme17 what i did was when I started studying Korean every time i started with the alphabet. No matter if i knew it or memorized it i still studied it. Also you should always practice the way you write and the way you pronounce hangul. But everybody practices a differently :)

  • @abhijita108
    @abhijita108 Před 2 lety +6442

    As a Korean, I know that Korean is extremely hard to begin with (It used to be my worst subject in school lol) but trust me when I say this, Its gets so much easier. Its just like English!

    • @ARMY-qn1tu
      @ARMY-qn1tu Před 2 lety +92

      I want to learn Korean too can you guide me about this language and hangul

    • @ARMY-qn1tu
      @ARMY-qn1tu Před 2 lety +6

      @@abhijita108 ok thank you 💜💜🥰🥰🥰

    • @abhijita108
      @abhijita108 Před 2 lety +6

      @@ARMY-qn1tu Np :)

    • @sm1purplmurderedme583
      @sm1purplmurderedme583 Před 2 lety +42

      english is so hard lol

    • @torontotokyo6689
      @torontotokyo6689 Před 2 lety +5

      I'm trying to learn hangul is your yt name api chita? Sry if I'm wrong 😭🥺

  • @sweetest_tae
    @sweetest_tae Před 3 lety +6991

    no one:
    taehyung: voice goes low when speaking English
    me: voice goes high when speaking Korean
    what is this language logic??? 🤔

    • @sb8095
      @sb8095 Před 3 lety +126

      That's cause whenever you speak English your voice goes lower. I speak English, Spanish and Hindi, whenever I speak Spanish or Hindi ky voice is high but when I speak English my voice gets lower.

    • @earnestdeclarationofmedioc1706
      @earnestdeclarationofmedioc1706 Před 3 lety +506

      In my experience, it is partially due to the place in your mouth that you are speaking. Korean is naturally higher than most (not all) accents when speaking English, as it is spoken from a place closer to the top and front of your palate.

    • @le30o0n
      @le30o0n Před 3 lety +95

      @@sb8095 so baisicaly when speaking foreign language your voice goes higher?

    • @Lilyyaa
      @Lilyyaa Před 3 lety +166

      George Washington I agree because when I speak other language than my native my voice gets higher haha

    • @cWjkL8ysxOkrH66
      @cWjkL8ysxOkrH66 Před 3 lety +86

      that's what happens with Rosé hehe when she speaks korean her voice goes way higher than her "normal tone" in english. it's the same for me with english and my native language, except my voice gets lower when i speak my second language (english).

  • @nothingtoseehere1964
    @nothingtoseehere1964 Před 3 lety +8610

    me in january: OK my goal is to be able to have a conversation in korean by december
    me in november: *still watching videos on how to start learning korean*

    • @lol-rf2un
      @lol-rf2un Před 3 lety +91

      lol me i'm trying

    • @user-do5ss7ek6b
      @user-do5ss7ek6b Před 3 lety +59

      Lol it's me😂

    • @manueltrujillo1198
      @manueltrujillo1198 Před 3 lety +11

      @@yojanacast did you learn in real life or youtube

    • @amilea9092
      @amilea9092 Před 3 lety +5

      @@yojanacast youtube or real life also wowww

    • @kimbapkidding9933
      @kimbapkidding9933 Před 3 lety +22

      @@yojanacast same. I learnt how to Read and write by watching knowing bros and Train to busan. 😂✌🏻

  • @cami7cloud
    @cami7cloud Před 2 lety +3486

    I’ve been studying Korean for nearly 3 years and I can understand most of what people say in Korean but when it comes to talking my mind just goes blank. It’s like I understand Korean but can’t speak it (with the proper grammar) and it really annoying but I’ll keep trying. Fighting!

    • @singlepringle9698
      @singlepringle9698 Před 2 lety +85

      same for me and portuguese, I live in portugal since 3 years and now my level is "I can understant what ppl say BUT i can't answer them" and it's annoying haha but we'll make it, fighting !

    • @stoatyboi2873
      @stoatyboi2873 Před 2 lety +79

      Understanding is always easier than speaking. Practice, practice, practice!!!!

    • @user-ir6mk6me7t
      @user-ir6mk6me7t Před 2 lety +25

      Haha yes!! Like i understand what they say but when i try to make a response my mind just goes *멍* I could handle maybe only basic conversations but nothing more beyond that. I also remember words that can be used in the convo but idk how to turn it into a sentence.

    • @Armtiny
      @Armtiny Před 2 lety +20

      I understand you. English is my second language, I read, think and text a lot in English (more than my native language) but when it comes to speaking I just go blank :')

    • @user-fn2yz8hc5c
      @user-fn2yz8hc5c Před 2 lety +63

      Me too.. When I met my Hong Kong friend in the past, he could understand Korean even though he couldn't speak Korean. And I couldn't speak English, but I could understand it. So when he spoke English, I answered in Korean.ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋWe were able to communicate like this.

  • @mochipjamas
    @mochipjamas Před 2 lety +2120

    The nice thing is, in my experience, that the native Korean speakers are SO sweet and kind when you TRY. Even if you sound like an idiot or say something technically rude most people I've met have been so pleased that I was trying at all that it makes me tear up. Especially older people always say how wonderful it is that I'm learning Korean and I'm doing "so good!" I know they're being polite, but it still gives me courage to try even though my skills are still around toddler level. 💜

    • @cant_afford_the_fancy_plants
      @cant_afford_the_fancy_plants Před 2 lety +30

      Wow. You know better people than I do.🤣

    • @marcelinetvq2004
      @marcelinetvq2004 Před 2 lety +26

      that’s cool! me and my dad go to a Korean restaurant and there is this little old lady that works there that tells me this stuff haha. she is really sweet!

    • @melanieswife13
      @melanieswife13 Před 2 lety +46

      sadly if your a native korean and mess up a korean word they will go harsh on us they are only nice to foreigners because they dont understand korean but they try😭 im hlaf black and korean and i still dont understand how to talk a conversation in korean just a little

    • @dazh686
      @dazh686 Před 2 lety +33

      @@melanieswife13 Similar thing with other languages, if you're a native speaker and make any kind of mistake, people will criticize you, particularly, some English speakers treat English as a sacred language. I heard cases where foreigners said they receive more consideration in work, unlike their Korean colleagues. In some countries, people doesn't give you much consideration if you're foreigner and make mistakes; that gesture in Korea should be appreciated.
      Based on what you said, it means you have Korean parents and you're just learning Korean as a 2nd (or so) language, meaning you're not a native speaker. Once I casually watched the video of a guy who has a British parent and a Korean parent, on his vlog they treated him as a foreigner and he could speak Korean fluently and he had some Korean traits, still different. It's known even people with both Korean parents who were born and raised in another country, they're treated as foreigners in Korea and that perspective is not wrong, culture and ethnicity get influenced by the place you lived in, mainly, it's not limited to your parents and/or ancestors' culture.
      There are other channels where bilingual Koreans pretended they didn't speak Korean at all, like speaking only Spanish 24 hours in Korea and they were treated in the way Mochi PJAMas said. You of course know your situation better than me, but it sounds like if that happens to you, as some said, it's because you're able to speak Korean to some degree and people assume you can speak it, but still make mistakes.

    • @tsuyuasui7297
      @tsuyuasui7297 Před rokem

      ​@@melanieswife13 Wait so do they go hard on your or not¿😭

  • @akirafuruya6852
    @akirafuruya6852 Před 3 lety +5702

    I love how her accent suddenly changes when she speaks korean, it’s so satisfying to hear

    • @estevez.05
      @estevez.05 Před 3 lety +103

      her accent is so pretty i want to learn how to get an accent like that when i speak

    • @twicepilled
      @twicepilled Před 3 lety +57

      @@estevez.05 i think it just comes naturally

    • @alistairt7544
      @alistairt7544 Před 3 lety +85

      It's called speaking other languages...lol My accent also changes when I speak French 😂

    • @deadacc-1301
      @deadacc-1301 Před 3 lety +9

      same mine gets throaty and deeps

    • @feliz5919
      @feliz5919 Před 3 lety +33

      @@alistairt7544 Lol same, as a trilingual, my accent changes when I speak in literally any of my other tongues.

  • @satimy5695
    @satimy5695 Před 3 lety +2456

    Following kpop groups really helps because you watch a lot of korean videos and listen to korean music while fangirling over your favorite idols

    • @petrichorrs
      @petrichorrs Před 3 lety +14

      Hahaha yeah

    • @S.21st
      @S.21st Před 3 lety +36

      Lol yea I’ve learned a lot when o started stanning kpop groups

    • @julietaf4617
      @julietaf4617 Před 3 lety +58

      Having a Korean friend also helps. My best friend grew up bilingual and she's like my personal tutor now.

    • @satimy5695
      @satimy5695 Před 3 lety +25

      @@julietaf4617 I wish i had one :(

    • @nishathfathima5977
      @nishathfathima5977 Před 3 lety +12

      Yes. This is a step in improving your korean.

  • @hhhhh-me1fb
    @hhhhh-me1fb Před 2 lety +739

    I’m a proud Korean myself, I find it so amazing that there are so many people interested in learning our language. Whenever I see someone struggling I always try to make them comfortable.

    • @leeknowsworshipper
      @leeknowsworshipper Před 2 lety +13

      that's really nice of you! I always thought languages were my thing and I could learn them somewhat easily, but Korean is definitely more difficult than any language I've tried to learn so far. this video didn't really help with motivation 😅 I'm from Finland btw and I find your country and language very beautiful, i dream of visiting someday!❤️

    • @areyin1244
      @areyin1244 Před 2 lety

      hai, i'm thinking to self learning korean. can you give me tips how to start it?

    • @zayna5549
      @zayna5549 Před rokem +3

      thats nice, i've always wanted to learn korean because i think its a beautiful language. just the way it flows and the accent is very pleasing. also because the culture is very beautiful too

    • @i.lov_her
      @i.lov_her Před rokem +1

      Make me comfortable pls I am starting to get anxious of how hard is this gonna be after watching the video and reading the comments-

    • @kirtibala672
      @kirtibala672 Před rokem

      Can you please help me to learn Korean language like a native speaker

  • @omao_aouu
    @omao_aouu Před 2 lety +288

    Hello, I'm an elementary school student in Korea who happened to watch this video. First of all, thank you for trying to learn Korean!Although I'm using a translator, I'll try to learn foreign languages such as English and so on! When COVID-19 ends, go to Korea and have fun! Koreans welcome foreigners to come and play!😁

    • @DeafKoreaLover
      @DeafKoreaLover Před rokem +5

      Thank you. I am here in Daegu

    • @Larry206
      @Larry206 Před rokem +2

      영어 다 배우면 가까운 국가부터 외우는 것을 추천합니다.
      제3외국어도 배우거든요(옛날 기준)

    • @alainaz7713
      @alainaz7713 Před rokem +6

      이것은 내가 읽은 가장 달콤한 댓글이었습니다! 저는 고등학교 마지막 학년에 재학 중인 미국인이고 내년에 대학에서 공부할 예정입니다. 여러분의 학업에 행운이 있기를 바라며, 영어를 포기하지 마세요!! 어렵다고 하시는 분들이 많으신데, 의지만 있다면 충분히 해낼 수 있습니다. 당신을 도와줄 사람들도 항상 있을 것입니다. (나는 이것을 위해 번역기를 사용했기 때문에 모든 것이 이해되기를 바랍니다. 그렇지 않다면 죄송합니다!)

    • @user-lg9or9qx6z
      @user-lg9or9qx6z Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@Larry206 외국에서 유학하는 중학생인데 영어를 다 배우고 나면 (영어를 완벽하게 구사할수 있는 실력이 됬을때) 다른 서양 언어들이 훨씬 쉬워집니다. 저는 지금 프랑스어를 배우는데요, 영어보다 조금 어렵긴 하지만 어순도 비슷하고 단어도 비슷한게 많아할만 해요! 굳이 가까운 국가부터 배우지 않아도 그냥 자신이 원하는 언어를 배우는게 좋다고 생각합니다. 그래야 배우고 싶은 마음이 추진력이 되죠. 배우고 싶은 언어가 일본이나 중국어같이 가까운 국가의 언어이면 larry님 말씀대로 훨씬 좋긴 하겠지만 그래도 자신이 배우고싶고 가장 필요하다 느끼는 언어를 느끼는게 우선이라 믿어요!

  • @acielle8096
    @acielle8096 Před 3 lety +3513

    Everyone! Don't be discouraged if these things scared you. Trust me you'll learn it gradually if you just continue your journey in learning😊

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před 3 lety +192

      F A C T S ~ ~

    • @beverlycinco9832
      @beverlycinco9832 Před 3 lety +10

      Thankyouuu!

    • @leadavids7951
      @leadavids7951 Před 3 lety +45

      I’m struggling a bit right now because I learned Hangul and like some basic stuff (some verbs, nouns, adjectives, a little bit sentence order,...) but now I don’t know how to continue... whenever I watch kdrama(basically everyday) I can understand roughly what they’re talking about but when it comes to endings and combining sentences etc. I’m completely lost and I’d ask myself like ‘what do I have to learn to understand this’....

    • @charmaynesingh255
      @charmaynesingh255 Před 3 lety +5

      tysm

    • @acielle8096
      @acielle8096 Před 3 lety +18

      @@leadavids7951 You're doing great! Just continue to learn new things everyday. Know that korean has a lot of endings and you'll never learn all of them overnight. I also find reading in TTMK app very helpful. Remember to take it easy and just enjoy😊

  • @shiraya318
    @shiraya318 Před 3 lety +2545

    I've studies Japanese for 4 years now and the problems you mentioned are basically the same problems you have while learning Japanese haha

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před 3 lety +204

      Oh man~ So we both be struggling~ 💀💀💀

    • @shiraya318
      @shiraya318 Před 3 lety +75

      @@NataliaGarza jup :') and I just realized that this means I'll have to go through it all again if I wanna learn Korean 💀

    • @honestlywhatever
      @honestlywhatever Před 3 lety +88

      @@shiraya318 Not really. It's literally so similar that all you'll need to do is apply what you've already got from Japanese. Though cultural differences and grammar etc slightly change it is not that far off at all. Not saying it's gonna be EASY per se but definitely not a struggle. Good luck

    • @shiraya318
      @shiraya318 Před 3 lety +35

      @Loren Swan Hm...Start with the alphabet. It's a lot easier to learn than Hiragana, Katakana and Kanji and if you're putting some time and effort into it you can learn it within 1-2 days.
      Then start with the basics such as greetings and introductions, just like in Japanese. You can check out howtostudykorean.com or "talk to me in korean" (ttmik), they're pretty good for learning basic grammar and vocabulary imo (ttmik costs money but the first 10 or so "essential korean" courses are free and they're really good imo). There are also some normal study books available online as PDF versions. "Korean Grammar in Use" is good for learning the most important grammar imo. I also used Sogang Korean for a while.
      In general, Korean grammar and Japanese grammar are quite similar so if you've gotten used to Japanese grammar, learning Korean Grammar is a bit easier than when you're starting completely anew. There are also some similarities in the vocabulary (like photograph: しゃしん (shashin) in Japanese and 사진 (Sajin) in Korean, or promise: やくそく (yakusoku) in Japanese and 약속 (yaksok) in Korean).

    • @shiraya318
      @shiraya318 Před 3 lety +10

      @@honestlywhatever True that. I mean, I already learned quite a bit of Korean and noticed the similarities as well but just the thought of having to go through learning all the honorifics again (cuz I haven't studied the really formal language yet) gives me headaches cuz learning Keigo was a nightmare for me and I still struggle with it lol. Also the thing with the words that basically all mean the same in English but have different connotations in Korean, that stuff was (and sometimes still is) confusing to me in Japanese so doing it again with Korean...hah :') But yeah, knowing Japanese definitely makes learning Korean a bit easier! ^^

  • @devanshipandey1429
    @devanshipandey1429 Před 3 lety +612

    I just learntㅏ,ㅓ,ㄷ,ㄴ,ㄹ, etc.I was so proud of myself and now I'm hesitant to even continue🤕

    • @user_pwrmhrb10
      @user_pwrmhrb10 Před 3 lety +150

      Korean-English bilingual here -- Korean is the language that is "easy to learn, hard to master." You will be able to carry a conversation even if you don't have even half the vocabs the video is talking about. The pronunciation issues don't really matter because native koreans will get many of these wrong. Awkward grammars will be understood as long as subject is in the front and predicate is at the end. No one will be offended by using vocabs with wrong connotations either. A counterpart would be a korean person asking you, with a bad accent, "what race is you" when he just wanted to say "where are you from."
      Here's the warning though -- you need someone who can have a "conversation" in Korean. As you probably noticed, Korean is a language of delicacy with all the different connotations. You cannot really learn about them until you make mistakes and embarrass yourself through making conversations. Uhh but imo that's a price to pay to learn ANY language so :/ All Korean pronunciations are very forward and happen 'at the tip of the tongue' (talk the phrase out verbally and you'll know what I mean).
      Good luck!

    • @MochiDrip
      @MochiDrip Před 2 lety +32

      Feel you, this Woman made me insecure

    • @phoenixscarlet5755
      @phoenixscarlet5755 Před 2 lety +13

      To be honest, I started learning korean 2 days ago with only one goal in mind, which is to just read korean novels. I thought that maybe if I could just know the vocabulary and how to read, the rest would come afterwards. For example when I read, I might get how the grammatical structure works and so on. I might be wrong, and I hope I am not, but if I am, maybe you could just focus on reading a lot at the beginning with watching lots of shows to get the hang of things later at your own pace

    • @cafebreve1
      @cafebreve1 Před 2 lety

      Yes!!! She stressed me out big time.

    • @Stargirlxxxxx28
      @Stargirlxxxxx28 Před 2 lety +2

      하지만 아직 실감이 나지 않는다 해도 과언이 아니다 아무리 새로운

  • @magoinnewzealand7477
    @magoinnewzealand7477 Před 2 lety +114

    As a Korean mom who has an 11 yr boy born in New Zealand, I think learning Korean from watching various CZcams videos is much better than from watching K-drama. cuz words or expressions in dramas are quite often awkward if used in our real life. I sometimes tease my son about his "K-dramatic" Korean. :-)

  • @bameWhat
    @bameWhat Před 3 lety +3606

    Hi, I'm Korean, and I'm studying English alone these days. One thing I think every time I feel English is difficult; What if I am learning Korean while Korean is not my native language? How lucky am I? Take pride in learning Korean. You guys are amazing!!! :)

    • @shirin3166
      @shirin3166 Před 3 lety +160

      Yes english is hard
      The pronunciations and stuff
      While your language has one TwT
      bourgeoisie
      My brother showed me this word and im like **what?** And its actually pronounced
      ˌbo͝orZHwäˈzē
      WHAT THE HELL
      Boorzhwazi

    • @lynxaway
      @lynxaway Před 3 lety +140

      Your English is lovely! Good luck with your language learning.

    • @AGPostarStudios
      @AGPostarStudios Před 3 lety +121

      「Cherish Cherries 」 the pronunciation is weird for that word because it’s actually a French word lol, we borrowed it. But yeah English prononciation can be tricky!! But you’re doing amazing, at least from what I can tell with ur comment :)

    • @shirin3166
      @shirin3166 Před 3 lety

      @@AGPostarStudios thank you :)

    • @moonchild8128
      @moonchild8128 Před 3 lety +2

      Oh good luck !!!!

  • @rhirhi9181
    @rhirhi9181 Před 2 lety +541

    I’ve always picked up languages quickly so Korean was no different lol. Learners over complicate things in their mind easily! It happens ALL THE TIME, just remember that even five year olds struggle with speaking, some eight year olds do to! Don’t worry about it! Your doing great. The only thing I seriously seriously suggest is DO NOT learn English romanization, I never did, and I’m so glad 😀

    • @shingibangiboongboongbangi3847
      @shingibangiboongboongbangi3847 Před 2 lety +15

      Can you please tell me which resources you used to learn korean?? 🥺

    • @anybrooks4542
      @anybrooks4542 Před 2 lety

      Yess please do

    • @jiminssocks1220
      @jiminssocks1220 Před 2 lety +1

      ayee, thanks for this! 🤍

    • @rhirhi9181
      @rhirhi9181 Před 2 lety +2

      @@anybrooks4542 I replied to their comment with all of my Korean learning recommendations! I hope any of it still helps!

    • @christinelockwood3497
      @christinelockwood3497 Před 2 lety +13

      I would like to know what resources you used, as well. Everything I’m finding has romanization in it, which only tempts me to be lazy in trying to read 한글. I’ve gotten a bit frustrated about it, to be honest, because if the romanization is sitting right next to or under the 한글 (as it usually is), then my eyes drift right to it and it’s hard to ignore it or not to see it. Even the Korean-English dictionaries, and they alphabetize the words by the English alphabet, not the Korean one.

  • @thisisnana6454
    @thisisnana6454 Před 2 lety +121

    I remember watching this a year ago and being so scared to even start learning Korean, here I am now after a year of studying, getting ready for my first topik exam! Don't give up guys, it's not as hard as it seems plus it's totally worth it!

  • @mikqyla
    @mikqyla Před 3 lety +1074

    *makes eye contact with friend* "nosebleed?"

  • @laurarabadan3909
    @laurarabadan3909 Před 3 lety +858

    to all the people trying to learn a new language: you will learn these things either on the way or when you´re more advanced in that language so don't stress about EVERYTHING before starting, the important thing is having the will to do it

    • @thezakiashow5599
      @thezakiashow5599 Před 3 lety +5

      @@zinnnia don’t give up ! I’m not giving up neither should you 💙

    • @jenns9298
      @jenns9298 Před 3 lety +2

      Best comment!

    • @hoe4han935
      @hoe4han935 Před 3 lety +4

      Too late, I’ve already given up😭

  • @brianblood9691
    @brianblood9691 Před rokem +40

    I’m in Korean studying abroad right now. I’m very surprised you found so many Koreans who spoke great English at university. That has not been the case for me, so I’ve started learning a lot more Korean even though I didn’t come to Korea with much knowledge.

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před rokem +1

      Hmmm perhaps my university's program just connected us better? I'm currently studying at a Korea University and again there are plenty of Korean students that speak good English~

  • @gamer1X12
    @gamer1X12 Před 2 lety +82

    as with any language, consuming media in that language helps tremendously. i could not get the "gk" sound for the life of me but I listened to a few blackpink songs (namely jisoo's parts in lovesick girls) and imitating their pronunciation and speech pattern helped alot. in the mean time you also may find shows/music/movies/books you like, so thats a plus

    • @cc_ppur1334
      @cc_ppur1334 Před 2 lety

      So are you fluent?
      I mean immersion takes literally alot of time like 5-10 years.
      Yes, immersion works. But you cant say immersion works in just 3months or 1 years i dont think so.

    • @gamer1X12
      @gamer1X12 Před 2 lety +4

      @@cc_ppur1334 i never said i was fluent or fully immersed or that it only took me 4 months. I never claimed any of those things. All i said was listening to native speakers helped me with tricky sounds. If I was fluent in Hangul I wouldnt be commenting on learning videos 😄

    • @cc_ppur1334
      @cc_ppur1334 Před 2 lety

      @@gamer1X12 No. I was just commenting on immersion word which have been throwing around lately in Language video.
      When the truth about Immersion learning is it takes alot of time.
      I have done it with 3 language so its not as easy as people claim to be thats why.
      Yes, obviously some obvious 1-2 line you could get easily but framing a paragraph etc still need alot of years.
      Sorry if you took it in a wrong way.

  • @danai5985
    @danai5985 Před 3 lety +2621

    This has ended any impression I had that Korean is easier than Chinese 😂😂😂

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před 3 lety +177

      Danai // 丹娜 LOLOLOL I told you about all the time I got mad at Korean for not being Chinese, right?? 😂😂 or maybe I answered that in a Q&A that I haven’t posted yet hahahah

    • @danai5985
      @danai5985 Před 3 lety +36

      Natalia Garza hahaha you did not???? I need to see that q&a!! 😂😂

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před 3 lety +43

      Danai // 丹娜 LOL Okay definitely in that Q&A then 😂😂 you asked me about the differences between the languages and I gave you a laundry list 😂😂 I have the video set as private right now hah it’ll come out once I film the second half of it 🙈

    • @danai5985
      @danai5985 Před 3 lety +16

      Natalia Garza 😂😂 I am in equal parts so ready and so nervous hahahah

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před 3 lety +24

      omgggg why are you nervous?? 😂

  • @dark_night3204
    @dark_night3204 Před 3 lety +797

    I cannot express the amount of times I have said “I know right” or “can relate to that” or the amount of times I have paused the vid so that I can ramble to myself about these topics

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před 3 lety +49

      LOLOLOLOL I'd love to hear about the points you ranted about yourself 😂

    • @marsimus13
      @marsimus13 Před 3 lety

      LMAO SAME

  • @daniellehill2734
    @daniellehill2734 Před 2 lety +32

    Just started self teaching less than a month ago and I’m so happy I stumbled upon your page.

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před 2 lety +3

      I hope my videos will help you in your studies~ you may have to scroll back a bit for language study videos, but they’re there!

  • @ironandthread
    @ironandthread Před 3 lety +49

    Regarding your final point, to live overseas, no matter what country, English speakers have to find nuanced ways to learn and immerse themselves in the local language. I met a Canadian in China who wanted so badly to speak Mandarin that he'd hang out and play checkers with old men. Those old guys didn't speak a word of English and weren't interested in doing so. In fact, he was so focussed that he excluded all English speakers from his existence while over there. It was an important and determined way to approach language study, but it was also effective. While I, on the other hand, only picked up a fraction of what he did in the same amount of time.

  • @sofiagruner4927
    @sofiagruner4927 Před 3 lety +880

    I have currently been learning Korean for 54 days and it has been quite the journey already. It is so difficult at times, and just when I start to feel confident I do a new lesson and suddenly I have no brain cells. It also doesn't help that I have a full school schedule and I have no one around me that knows Korean or can help me. However, I am still very young (12) and I'm willing to spend a long period of time learning Korean, I'm in no rush and that makes it a little easier. Plus, this is the first language I'm ever learning, so I might as well go big or go home. I think that as long as I don't stop I can gradually learn Korean, and I hope that proves to be true, cause I know it will be so worth it in the end. Thanks for reading this if you did!

    • @aryssaheart1079
      @aryssaheart1079 Před 3 lety +24

      goodluck :)

    • @tabitas.2719
      @tabitas.2719 Před 3 lety +10

      That's a good attitude!
      Could you find a Korean pen pal?

    • @tabitas.2719
      @tabitas.2719 Před 3 lety +2

      Also I just found this other video she did with some good tips in case you haven't seen it yet :)
      czcams.com/video/Ke9ki4Fdqkc/video.html

    • @sofiagruner4927
      @sofiagruner4927 Před 3 lety +17

      @@tabitas.2719 I'm sure I can, there are also apps that I could use to message other people who speak Korean. However, before I do so I want to get a little more confident with my skills, I'm learning at a slow pace because of school and my brother is getting married and my sister is moving to Hawaii, it's all just very hectic.

    • @tabitas.2719
      @tabitas.2719 Před 3 lety +7

      @@sofiagruner4927 Keep at it; you seem on a good path!

  • @there_sai
    @there_sai Před 3 lety +2926

    As a Korean, I think Korean is difficult.

    • @prishahahahah
      @prishahahahah Před 3 lety +103

      As not being Korean ! Please help me learning it if you're free🙂 I'm literally suffering!

    • @callmekiki882
      @callmekiki882 Před 3 lety +61

      @@prishahahahah yikes

    • @gpdnjsqkr5938
      @gpdnjsqkr5938 Před 3 lety +5

      @@prishahahahah I can help.(maybe)

    • @prishahahahah
      @prishahahahah Před 3 lety +3

      @@gpdnjsqkr5938 really it would be soo good then^_^

    • @prishahahahah
      @prishahahahah Před 3 lety +2

      @@iam3gion204 thenx for this bud:-)

  • @user-nt6bg6mc1z
    @user-nt6bg6mc1z Před 3 lety +57

    I'm a Greek native speaker and I have been learning Korean since November. For me, Korean is both easy and difficult. Sometimes Korean is so confusing and difficult but I'm not giving up because I love this language. Before I started taking courses in Korean, I knew a few words and phrases in Korean from kpop and kdramas. At this time, after 6 months of learning Korean, I can understand much more and things that used to be difficult to me, are easy.
    I also want to learn Chinese and Japanese even though I know they are difficult. I can read/write a few Chinese characters and I know a few words and phrases from cdramas. At first, I thought Chinese is so difficult but now, it seems easier to me. For me, tones and pronunciation are the most difficult.
    I said all of these because you shouldn't give up learning a language you love/you want to learn because of some difficulties. You should pay more attention on these difficulties and try to overcome them. You can do this! 화이팅!!
    I'm sorry if I made grammar mistakes. As I said before English is not my mother tongue and even though I can communicate and speak in English, I'm still making a few mistakes.

    • @someone3435
      @someone3435 Před rokem

      Γεια σου ! Θα ήθελα να σε ρωτήσω πόσο καιρό σου πήρε να μπορείς να διαβάσεις κανονικά, δηλαδή να βλέπεις τα γράμματα και αμέσως αυτόματα να σου βγαίνει να το πεις. Επίσης, θα ήθελα να μάθω κάποια Κορεάτικα μόνη μου πριν πάω σε κάποιο φροντιστήριο για να μου είναι πιο εύκολο να τα μάθω, λόγω δουλειάς και χρόνου. Θα μπορούσες να μου πεις ίσως 2-3 τιπς στο τι θα έπρεπε να κάνω, με ποια σειρά και ίσως τι να αποφύγω; Αυτά εαν έχεις την καλή διάθεση να μου απαντήσεις θα χαιρόμουν πολύ. Α ! Και τα αγγλικά σου είναι τέλεια ❤

    • @drpow6244
      @drpow6244 Před 11 měsíci

      ​​@@someone3435 Γεια σου κοκλα. Πλακα κανω. Παντως και εγω σκεφτομαι να ξεκινησω μαθηματα. Εχει κατι εφαρμογες-ιστοσελοδες που κανεις μαθηματα με Κορεατες για 10-20 ευρω την ωρα με καμερα κτλ, σαν το zoom/skype. Πριν ξεκινησω ομως λεω να μαθω τα βασικα μονος μου και μετα να κανω μαθημα 1-2 φορες τη βδομαδα.

    • @someone3435
      @someone3435 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@drpow6244Α ωραιο αυτό. Ευχαριστώ

    • @rosevenice4032
      @rosevenice4032 Před 9 měsíci

      Thank you
      M starting today(Korean) and I was just looking for tips b4 I start, almost gave up😹
      But tnx for motivating me😍😍🖤🖤

  • @kind0fkorean
    @kind0fkorean Před 2 lety +26

    I've been learning Korean for 8 years now. I don't understand people saying they mastered it in like 6 months lol. They must be a genius! But the fruits of labor to pay off as live in Korea working on TV, Radio and translating Kdramas to English for a living. Everyone, it may take a while, but never give up!

    • @alainaz7713
      @alainaz7713 Před rokem +2

      Can I ask, how did you get to Korea and get hired to translate Kdramas? Did you study at university in Korea or another english-speaking country?

    • @ELA._.BORATED
      @ELA._.BORATED Před 10 měsíci +1

      How’s the salary?

    • @BushidoIslander8689
      @BushidoIslander8689 Před 22 dny

      Gomawo for the encouragement 💪🫶

  • @annazabozlaeva9196
    @annazabozlaeva9196 Před 3 lety +1483

    Be happy you’re not learning Russian. To address someone politely in this language you must know this person’s father’s name. There no mr, ssi or san, comrade is past century as well, it’s used only to mock at smbd. Only Vladimir Vladimirovich, no other options, no mercy😀

    • @louisefuchs2086
      @louisefuchs2086 Před 3 lety +48

      Or the 6 declinations, (падежи) 🤯

    • @sleepnightmare
      @sleepnightmare Před 3 lety +31

      @@louisefuchs2086 I'd say about 6, more inclined to say 7 because of vocative (звательный п.), but that's debatable

    • @katies904
      @katies904 Před 3 lety +27

      Not exactly, you can say Тётя Света, Or Дядя Миша. You can get around that, cause I almost never say their ‘middle’ name

    • @hasyaamj
      @hasyaamj Před 3 lety +16

      Respect to my friend whom freakin' love with Russian

    • @pokaay3163
      @pokaay3163 Před 3 lety +33

      hahaha my friend is learning Russian, while I'm learning Korean. We struggle together.

  • @DarkestRuby7
    @DarkestRuby7 Před 3 lety +1006

    This video just told my lazy ass to give up 😭😭

    • @kookminochim
      @kookminochim Před 3 lety +94

      Actually all Asian languages have the same system. But don’t give up yeah? We can still learn, I’ve been learning for a few months, ALONE WITHOUT KNOWING WHAT TO DO ACTUALLY buuuut it’s still fun when you understand what (as in my case) BTS is saying hehe.

    • @pheladi7092
      @pheladi7092 Před 3 lety +9

      same

    • @kendrullbored3185
      @kendrullbored3185 Před 3 lety +6

      Istg 💀

    • @victoriamegeke9881
      @victoriamegeke9881 Před 3 lety +3

      Tell me about it

    • @bme7995
      @bme7995 Před 3 lety +1

      I can’t even learn Nepali, my own primary 😑😂..😩

  • @nashrahabdulbasit2052
    @nashrahabdulbasit2052 Před 2 lety +4

    Her hand movements are so satisfying 😳

  • @raeditz_official
    @raeditz_official Před 2 lety +5

    Natalia, luckily I watched this BEFORE I started learning Korean. Thanks for the tips! I think it will help a lot!

  • @shirin3166
    @shirin3166 Před 3 lety +831

    Lesson learned:
    •Learn nasals
    •Ask a korean
    (Or a teacher or in youtube TwT)
    Lol
    For korean begginer learners
    I recommend you to learn
    Nasals pronouncations
    And pronunciations of ㄹ/ㄱ/ㄷ/ㅂ/ㅈ
    Learn more about korean culture lol
    Man I've been learning korean for months and ive been making progress but...
    *I didnt um.. learn a lot of verbs-*

    • @ines5901
      @ines5901 Před 3 lety +6

      I on ly learn it via drops

    • @aryannacarpio
      @aryannacarpio Před 3 lety +2

      「Cherish Cherries 」 I learn on htsk, and ttmik and they are both great tools!

    • @rahee8738
      @rahee8738 Před 3 lety +19

      I'm a beginner,so I'm so confused.I have only learnt Hangul.
      Now Idk what to learn next and how to or from where to learn....
      Can anyone please help me?

    • @momooneit7100
      @momooneit7100 Před 3 lety

      Yeah same

    • @0terrors1
      @0terrors1 Před 3 lety +2

      don't forget to learn ㅡ

  • @Rozehunnie
    @Rozehunnie Před 3 lety +2256

    I learned many of these things when I started learning Korean and let me tell you... I did NOT know what I got myself into. I thought, oh wow, I learned Hangul (한글) in less than 15 hours, I can read the letters pretty well if I take my time, this is a piece of cake!
    Oh dear, I was so wrong... I leaned so hard on romanization that when I saw words like 꽃 and 없다 I died a little (and I thought 외, 외, and 왜 was bad). So I learned 받침 (batchim) and it doesn't seem so bad,, Then the GRAMMAR comes slapping me in the face and I almost wanted to cry. But I'm not giving up. I think of those who are learning English because it is one of the most dominant languages ( and additionally for me, the idols who are learning English for their fans) it just motivates me even more to learn. I know it won't happen over night, realistically it may take years, and I'm willing to put that take time, effort, and commitment. *Dances aggressively to Blood, Sweat, and Tears*

    • @hafsachrouate333
      @hafsachrouate333 Před 3 lety +32

      Good luck on learning korean 💟 and thank you so much for the motivation you gave me 💖

    • @Rozehunnie
      @Rozehunnie Před 3 lety +10

      @@hafsachrouate333 Good luck too you too! 화이팅! 🤍🤍

    • @caiovinicius5204
      @caiovinicius5204 Před 2 lety +10

      Hi! How is your Korean now?

    • @Rozehunnie
      @Rozehunnie Před 2 lety +33

      @@caiovinicius5204 Hello! I would say I'm making progress. Sentence structure has become easier for me to understand, and I'm learning many verbs + verb stems, then combining those with different endings to make words. There are also subject and topic marking particles, as well as time and location, but I'm taking one step at a time 천천히 (slowly). Whenever I feel discouraged I just remember that I went from not knowing anything at all, to being able to read at a slow pace and pick up small words and phrases here and there. ^^

    • @caiovinicius5204
      @caiovinicius5204 Před 2 lety +7

      @@Rozehunnie so proud of you! How long have you been studying korean?

  • @carys7793
    @carys7793 Před 2 lety +6

    This reaction was mine when I first started out. I’ve been learning for 1 year and I still mess up, but tbh it’s not that hard. Focusing on all the little nuances only over complicated things for me. Once I started taking things as they come and not getting ahead of myself, it was way less overwhelming. Just take the language as it comes and don’t get worked up. You got this❤️

  • @arianana9805
    @arianana9805 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for the forewarning 🙏🏽 I feel the way you speak and vibe on a spiritual level. Makes your videos so much fun to watch. You just got a new subscriber. Thanks for making good content!

  • @lizzyboo4551
    @lizzyboo4551 Před 3 lety +450

    6:58 really, it took me a while to realize that in Korean, when "ㅅ" is used at the end of words, it's no longer an "s" sound and turns into "t". I was so confused at first hearing people pronounce it like that...

    • @jesusismysavior3888
      @jesusismysavior3888 Před 3 lety +17

      Learn Batchim. It will help you a lot. Search up on yt.

    • @inesnvideo9499
      @inesnvideo9499 Před 3 lety +14

      Same with some words which begin with ㅅ and we pronounce sh instead of s

    • @ryankane4984
      @ryankane4984 Před 3 lety +2

      everything makes so much sense now

    • @yunaversal1099
      @yunaversal1099 Před 3 lety +1

      is this always the case or only for some words ending with that?

    • @olajumokepatience1370
      @olajumokepatience1370 Před 3 lety +7

      @@inesnvideo9499 no...s only sound like sh when it is followed by a vowel "i".

  • @cueiyo6906
    @cueiyo6906 Před 3 lety +1843

    3:22 "they are so many Korean words that translates to one or two words in English"
    Wanna see polish?
    English:
    Play
    Time for polish _crackes fingers_
    Polish:
    Gra
    Gracie
    Graj
    Grajcie
    Grajcież
    Grajmy
    Grajmyż
    Grają
    Grając
    Grająca
    Grające
    Grającego
    Grającej
    Grający
    Grających
    Grającym
    Grającymi
    Grającą
    Grajże
    Grali
    Graliby
    Gralibyście
    Gralibyśmy
    Graliście
    Graliśmy
    Gram
    Grana
    Grane
    Granego
    Granej
    Grandma
    Grani
    Grania
    Graniach
    Graniami
    Granie
    Graniem
    Graniom
    Graniu
    Grano
    Grany
    Granych
    Granym
    Granymi
    Graną
    Grasz
    Grał
    Grała
    Grałaby
    Grałabym
    Grałabyś
    Grałam
    Grałaś
    Grałby
    Grałbym
    Grałbyt
    Grałem
    Grałeś
    Grało
    Grałoby
    Grały
    Grałyby
    Grałybyście
    Grałybyśmy
    Grałyscie
    Grałyśmy
    Grań
    Niegrająca
    Niegrające
    Niegrającego
    Niegrającej
    Niegrającema
    Niegrający
    Niegrających
    Niegrającymi
    Niegrającą
    Niegrana
    Niegrane
    Niegranego
    Niegranej
    Niegranemu
    Niegrani
    Niegrania
    Niegraniach
    Niegraciami
    Niegranie
    Niegraniom
    Niegranig
    Niegrany
    Niegranych
    Niegranym
    Niegranymi
    Niegraną
    Niegra

    • @nitalsawant441
      @nitalsawant441 Před 3 lety +315

      You are kidding me r?

    • @StrxberryLix
      @StrxberryLix Před 3 lety +166

      👁👄👁

    • @kvmi1682
      @kvmi1682 Před 3 lety +244

      3:22 "they are so many Korean words that translate to one or two words in English"
      English: play
      chinese:


      玩耍
      玩弄
      玩儿
      嬉戏
      游玩
      游乐

      游戏
      打游戏

      比赛
      打比赛
      竞技
      对决
      表演

      演出
      表演
      饰演
      扮演
      演戏


      戏剧



      吹奏
      演奏
      奏曲


      逗弄


      赌钱
      盘弄
      盘算
      算弄

    • @szecr
      @szecr Před 3 lety +81

      @@kvmi1682 I have a brief knowledge of Chinese and I think that 95% of those words don't translate to play 👀 I might be wrong though lol
      Like "打" means hit.

    • @kvmi1682
      @kvmi1682 Před 3 lety +124

      @@szecr hi uh i am a native chinese speaker and yes you're right, '打' does mean hit, but it can mean play too such as '打比赛', it means play a game, hope this helps :)

  • @WillWilsonII
    @WillWilsonII Před 2 lety +6

    Started maybe 5 weeks ago casually testing myself a few times a day how to read Hangul. Now I'm listening to Korean music. Luli Lee and Rolling Quartz are great

  • @realkimcovers6382
    @realkimcovers6382 Před 2 lety +10

    I love to learn Korean language and watching you It helps me to understand more about their language.💜

  • @iamkaeseolin9407
    @iamkaeseolin9407 Před 3 lety +1081

    I am in the process of learning Korean but now I'm scared.:(

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před 3 lety +222

      Awwww don't be scared~ You won't encounter all these things at once! It's all gradual haha

    • @ayoayo1044
      @ayoayo1044 Před 3 lety +23

      No its ok you got this. I want to learn too

    • @iamkaeseolin9407
      @iamkaeseolin9407 Před 3 lety +17

      @@ayoayo1044 though I know there are no shortcuts to learning but I'm really fighting the feeling of being overwhelm on this. Gomawoyo.

    • @c.r.t1586
      @c.r.t1586 Před 3 lety +8

      I always get demotivate

    • @iamkaeseolin9407
      @iamkaeseolin9407 Před 3 lety +11

      @@c.r.t1586 Don't be...Let's remain positive okay? :)

  • @drafeirha
    @drafeirha Před 3 lety +559

    the inability to use the word you in a non casual setting is something that still bothers me even after 5 years of using Korean almost daily

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před 3 lety +83

      It can definitely be an inconvenience coming from a language that does use the word you haha

    • @simoroshka
      @simoroshka Před 3 lety +55

      I would not survive, I struggle remembering names in any language, even my own.

    • @tonilou
      @tonilou Před 3 lety +3

      I'm a tiny bit discouraged now...

    • @jeonseuphoria351
      @jeonseuphoria351 Před 3 lety +1

      @@tonilou you can do it make the most of now you can definitely do it!

    • @cattybabbe
      @cattybabbe Před 3 lety

      @@tonilou I am also. I really want to learn how to read the Korean language. If it's as difficult as she says then it won't be beneficial for me to continue studying. I'll have to give it some serious thought if I'll continue.

  • @faker_sh
    @faker_sh Před 3 lety +37

    Japanese learner here. The struggles are quite similar, specially when it comes to formality and "ambiguous" sentence clauses. It's a common thing in asian languages I suppose, even tho I just had contact with Japanese, Korean and Chinese so far. I wonder if Tagalog and others have the "same features" as well~

    • @wasabij
      @wasabij Před 5 měsíci

      Tagalog definitely has grammar features similar to Japanese at times

  • @scanspeak00
    @scanspeak00 Před 11 měsíci +5

    I've just started learning Korean really just for fun and so I can appreciate more Korean music and movies. I don't want it to be stressful or work so I will take my time.
    Thanks for your advice.

  • @redcrest5
    @redcrest5 Před 3 lety +406

    8:16 This applies so utterly to Japanese too -- you can't just learn the language, you have to learn the mindset/culture to be able to *actually* understand and communicate properly. Props to you for this vid -- this is something students of Korean (and maybe all east asian languages?) will definitely need to know!

    • @jeygee3736
      @jeygee3736 Před 2 lety +12

      It's the same with any language pretty much.

    • @passionxoxo9940
      @passionxoxo9940 Před 2 lety +14

      I will say that Japanese came easier and I think going from English to Japanese pronunciation is much easier… but we persevere!

    • @angelshimai
      @angelshimai Před 2 lety +1

      I've thought about this a lot. Japanese has fewer vowels and more distinctive consonants. Fewer sounds to try to add to your ears and mouth. 😅 Also, I think the particles are easier in Japanese since you don't change them based on the following sound.

    • @linzyc4696
      @linzyc4696 Před 2 lety +2

      That’s any language

    • @urear8825
      @urear8825 Před rokem

      日本語を勉強してる。 私は日本の文化についてあまり知りしない、今はしかしそれを学ぼうとしてい。

  • @esmeral321
    @esmeral321 Před 3 lety +464

    Now that I think about it.. It's pretty similar in Spanish. You can't say "tu" (you) to someone that is older than you because it's offensive you say "usted"(you) but if you say "usted" to someone around your age they will freak out jaja

    • @frauleinstern5170
      @frauleinstern5170 Před 3 lety +23

      Francieli Garcia Rodriguez Same in German with „du“ (informal you) and „Sie“ (formal you) 😊

    • @0rangeorchid
      @0rangeorchid Před 3 lety +40

      But in Korean, you don't say them AT ALL. Its not needing to pick the correct one, there is no correct one.

    • @UziTuni
      @UziTuni Před 3 lety

      Exacto

    • @andreat2723
      @andreat2723 Před 3 lety +7

      Hijole... Tienes razon :0

    • @collidewiththesea
      @collidewiththesea Před 3 lety +9

      Same thing in Latvian and Russian. You know you've grown up when people start addressing you with the formal "you". Was definetely hard to get used to when I reached my late teens.
      Also when people who are the same age as me and have the same classes as me use the formal "you", i get so confused. Because then if I address them formally next time we speak, I don't want to sound overly-formal or like I treat them as a complete stranger despite us seeing eachother everyday but then also if I address them informally, I'm afraid they'd think I'm being rude. It's a whole dilemma. :D

  • @June-oe6rx
    @June-oe6rx Před 2 lety +4

    As a Korean, I so much love this video. The mistaken facts are so well explained. Like how you compared Korean with English. I also learned more about Korean lol. I didn't thought these could be a unique characteritics of Korean.

  • @user-oh6wb5rj2q
    @user-oh6wb5rj2q Před 2 lety +1

    I like how polite the Korean language is, which makes me love this language very much

  • @PierceTheWoodey101
    @PierceTheWoodey101 Před 3 lety +212

    Honestly, when I start learning a language I throw away any preconceived notions of the language and avoid applying my understanding of English grammar and sentences structure to the language I’m learning. I literally just turn into a baby and absorb as much as I can as if I don’t know any other language and repeat everything I hear. Obviously I am still aware of what the words mean in my native language, but I try to remove any barriers that I might put up other you end up overthinking the language and it becomes a lot harder to learn/understand.

    • @strawberrycellphone
      @strawberrycellphone Před 3 lety +16

      I personally find this the best way to learn a language since, as you said, it removes the barriers and let's you absorb like a baby. Then in no time you get used to the grammar and pronunciation, and even find more ways to say a simple sentence or to express yourself in general.

    • @apollofateh324
      @apollofateh324 Před 3 lety +14

      Same, I think that's why people say it's harder to learn a language when you're older. It's not actually because it's difficult, it's because you try to apply rules from your native language onto it and then wonder why you fail. If you accepted that you don't know jack shit before starting, it's much easier :)

    • @chloeakporiaye9904
      @chloeakporiaye9904 Před 3 lety +2

      my biggest issue is the different grammar structure like for example, in english its, can you pass me the bag please?, in korean or spanish (which i speak) its like 'the bag you can pass?

    • @leozackdestron1574
      @leozackdestron1574 Před 3 lety

      @@chloeakporiaye9904 in Russian one can use any word order) SOV, VOS, OVS, OSV etc.

    • @leozackdestron1574
      @leozackdestron1574 Před 3 lety +2

      I too through away all stereotypes, because, first of all, I want to learn a language and I'll do it no matter what. Second different people have differnt learning capacities with different languages, so what was hard for one person can be easy for you.

  • @sanaaburas8459
    @sanaaburas8459 Před 3 lety +598

    The grandma doesn't has a 집 she has a 댁
    👁💧👄💧👁

  • @aliciabyul9550
    @aliciabyul9550 Před 2 lety +9

    It's going to be interesting learning korean. I understand that most languages have certain levels of seniority and different pronunciations for men and women. I treat any language the same way , learning korean will just be as hard as any non English speakers learning English for the first. It's about the effort.

  • @Felix_707
    @Felix_707 Před 2 lety +5

    I wasn't originally born in Korea so I had to learn it so I could communicate with my relatives,, I know it can be hard just don't give up! It took me 2 and a half years to learn it fluently and the hard work payed off ^^

  • @winterbear..
    @winterbear.. Před 3 lety +688

    We don't know what they said but let's laugh 😂💜

  • @AuroraRosee03
    @AuroraRosee03 Před 3 lety +507

    SSI used when they aren’t that much older than you but you’re not that close to them
    Jungguk : Jimin-SSI 😂😂😂

    • @lanbillie5214
      @lanbillie5214 Před 3 lety +7

      😂😂😂

    • @ilhammerzak2296
      @ilhammerzak2296 Před 3 lety +9

      But why taehyung called jisso "jisso ssi" ?

    • @aranihiritharan7465
      @aranihiritharan7465 Před 3 lety +35

      @@ilhammerzak2296 cuz the above applies...shes a bit older than her (not much tho) and they aren't close

    • @anqxl_moon.x
      @anqxl_moon.x Před 3 lety +27

      Bcuz it's formal language actually and Jungkook talks formally to BTS bcuz they'll are elder so.... Rm told him tht he could be informal with them but he refused....

    • @jyuya6594
      @jyuya6594 Před 3 lety +8

      @@anqxl_moon.x RM? Don't you mean Taehyung? Or did rm mention that before too?

  • @tracyalcero1196
    @tracyalcero1196 Před rokem +5

    Her voice sound so great when she speak Korean ❤

  • @angryowl6226
    @angryowl6226 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for putting captions :) It's very thoughtful and for me it's very useful so thank you :D

  • @endina
    @endina Před 3 lety +671

    I was kind of in a studying slump but yesterday i bought some new textbooks so i feel motivated again🥳

    • @NataliaGarza
      @NataliaGarza  Před 3 lety +38

      Ooooooo new books always do the trick!!

    • @JohnCiaccio
      @JohnCiaccio Před 3 lety +9

      I started out with several different books. TTMIK is really helpful and their Q & A videos are really awesome. The more source the better. You may find out better explanations in other materials. Don't limit yourself.

    • @eundongpark1672
      @eundongpark1672 Před 3 lety +5

      John Ciaccio TTMIK’s online lessons are good too. You have to pay, but IMO it’s totally worth it. The only complaint I have (and this goes for their workbooks too) is they don’t have enough exercises in the books or quiz questions in the online lessons. I need easily 4x the amount they have. I wish they had quiz 1, 2, 3, 4 for each lesson, so that I can keep exercising my understanding over a couple of weeks.

    • @JohnCiaccio
      @JohnCiaccio Před 3 lety +1

      @@eundongpark1672 I agree. I started out with TTMIk Text book and Korean Unnie and a couple other youtube channels. I was a good foundation to start with. A lot of writing and notes. Right now I spent several hours 5 days a week with Duolingo. Rewriting notes. Organizing. Anything I need practice on or don't understand I search for on CZcams. Most importantly 😜 I watch a ton of kdramas. Seems like everyday now a have slightly more comprehension and hearing different people speak helps a lot.

    • @OoBIWIoO
      @OoBIWIoO Před 3 lety +1

      @@eundongpark1672 when I opened the TTMIK textbooks I wanted to cry. I knew these are not enough exercises at all. but it's a start. An expensive one though

  • @10p7
    @10p7 Před 3 lety +241

    Every language has difficult parts, but if you divide those parts into small pieces, it's not that horrible anymore. All you need to learn a language is a patience and motivation.

  • @BD401K
    @BD401K Před 2 lety +1

    This was so fun and entertaining to watch. Thanks for the tips 😊

  • @Silent1Flame
    @Silent1Flame Před 2 lety +1

    I definitely believe that you meant every word that you said, because you completely gained my trust 😭 You're facial expressions and choice of words were gold lmao I really appreciate this video!!

  • @alliahrose2878
    @alliahrose2878 Před 3 lety +147

    The sound changing rules is really stressful at first but you will realize that they have that because to easily say the words. When you develop your reading and speaking skills you will see how you naturally do the sound changing rules even though you are not totally aware about it. Some letters are really difficult or impossible to pronounced the way it is without being awkward because of the next letter. So yeah, when you really practice your pronunciation, you will get the most sound changing rules much easier.

    • @lynn4ya
      @lynn4ya Před 3 lety +8

      I can relate to that. At first it was confusing, because I had to pay extra attention to the things I was saying to make sure it's all correct, but soon it became natural to change pronunciation when it's needed.

    • @alliahrose2878
      @alliahrose2878 Před 3 lety +6

      @@lynn4ya true abt first i was totally stressing myself out because of how many sound changing are there but soon enough I found myself not caring about it at all because I naturally read it wit eased.

    • @Tallefier
      @Tallefier Před 3 lety +10

      Ya, it's called consonant assimilation, and it happens in English, too. They made rules to describe this and explain how to pronounce it on sight, but it is a naturally occurring process that will just come over time with practice and experience.

    • @alliahrose2878
      @alliahrose2878 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Tallefier oh, that was it called. thank you for sharing.❤

  • @Collete13
    @Collete13 Před 3 lety +720

    Me starting to learn korean and watching this video:
    - She: "korean words change depending on the hierarchy"
    - Me, who studies Japanese: *painful flashbacks due to PTSD caused by keigo*
    The internal dilemma of "how much polite should I be" is real guys.

    • @maheenfatima6477
      @maheenfatima6477 Před 3 lety +16

      I also started to learn Korean but after watching this video I just want to give up on that 😂

    • @markovnikov5264
      @markovnikov5264 Před 3 lety +20

      I'm learning Japanese and Korean at the same time and now I remember when I thought It would be easy way(TT)(*_*)

    • @manakalaala
      @manakalaala Před 3 lety +7

      The Japanese language of keigo and Korean kyeogeo are almost the same.

    • @myk1137
      @myk1137 Před 2 lety +2

      @@manakalaala I mean the words look similar,so they come from Chinese I guess.

    • @The_SOB_II
      @The_SOB_II Před 2 lety

      @@kikokuro8870 when fish you easy
      Me:

  • @pyaesone9169
    @pyaesone9169 Před 3 lety +1

    That's so cool, it was nice to have a lot of people fluent in English, I can sense korean will be friendly. It was such a relief.

  • @weakanklesfornamjoon
    @weakanklesfornamjoon Před 2 lety +1

    Wow I’m feeling your pain right now in my early learning days, so I appreciate your validation!!! 💜 Also I love your pronunciation so it helps me aspire to your skill.

  • @katereids
    @katereids Před 3 lety +117

    She’s so stressed just talking about it and explaining it to us... pros to you for learning Korean patiently . I’m sure you learn something new every day

  • @jenna5903
    @jenna5903 Před 3 lety +315

    this just made my self esteem go down bc Korean is already hard and these rules make it 6x harder

    • @arghydoodles1921
      @arghydoodles1921 Před 3 lety +33

      I started learning Japanese at the end of last year and whilst I don't know a lot I definitely know waaaaaaaaay more than I did when I started. Just remember why you started and just do it. I assume you might watch K movies or K dramas so just get yourself to a basic proficiency after a few weeks and keep watching Korean content and you'll soon know a lot.

    • @imogenkemp4626
      @imogenkemp4626 Před 3 lety +29

      its not as hard as it seems, don't stress over things too much, after a while they'll become naturally engrained :)

    • @redding4540
      @redding4540 Před 3 lety +6

      ummm...try to read and learn thai. 😂😂😂😂 i already gave up

    • @apaiiyui8488
      @apaiiyui8488 Před 3 lety +5

      @@stanskz4630 i was going to be all sad because it looked really hard after this video and unmotivated me alot.. so really even if it wasn't meant for me this comment : thank you really much 😭💜
      I hope watching funny shows, drama's and music will help too and that I'll see the difference, I'm scared at my age to learn something like that, because when you age it's harder to learn haha I bought learning books from BTS and a korean youtube teacher book too but didn't touch it for 6 months.. I hope I'll make it 🥲 so thanks again you motivated me more 💜
      I Purple you 🌸

    • @Meandino804
      @Meandino804 Před 2 lety +1

      @@redding4540 finally a person interested in learning thai 🛐

  • @gangnamkorean3054
    @gangnamkorean3054 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi! I think this video on your experience of learning Korean will help my Korean language teaching. Thank you for sharing your experiences. Keep up your good work!

  • @Referee006
    @Referee006 Před rokem

    YOU ARE FANTASTIC! Your enthusiasm and your personality are infectious. Thanks for having your channel.

  • @pug4pres
    @pug4pres Před 3 lety +118

    The sound change one is interesting because if you look from a linguistic/phonology point of view, it's actually quite regular and predictable (unlike in English, where there are often several different phonological rules that can override each other depending on things like country of origin, rather than phonemes). For example, the reason the ㄱ in 한국 gets changed to a ㅇ in 한국말, but stay pronounced like a ㄱ in the word 한국어 is due to a rule called nasalization. What happens is that anytime a consonant comes before a nasal sound (m, n, or ng, I.e. sounds that are made by air escaping through the nasal cavity rather than the mouth), the consonant turns nasal. So for example, if you tried to say the word "pa" and "ma" in English, if you pay attention to mouth placement, you'll find that your tongue and mouth are actually in the exact same position for both. But if you try and plug your nose during the "ma" word, you can't say the word (since m is a nasal). Therefore, in Korean (and actually do quite a bit of nasalization in English too), the phoneme(sound/letter) will nasalize, ie have air go through the nose rather than mouth, but the tongue and mouth placement stays the same. If you try it in english, you'll see that the mouth placement for the words "da," "ta," and "na" are all the same, (with the differences being nasalization and aspiration), "ma," "ba," "pa," are all the same, as well as "ka," "ga," and "nga" being the same. It makes sense if you look at an IPA [International phonetic alphabet] chart, and match up the non-nasalized phoneme with the nasalized version in the same column. So if you ever have trouble remembering how things are pronounced, all you have to do is look at an IPA chart and look up the sound, since Korean consonants and English consonants map out perfectly for the purpose of the nasalization rule!

    • @crstph
      @crstph Před 3 lety +2

      yeah i find batchim frequently very intuitive (definitely not always tho...😅) but when i see a foreigner mispronounce an english word it often makes me look at the word and be like...damn...there really is no way for you to know that besides someone telling you and u just remember
      every time i get annoyed at having to learn a languages “exceptions” to a rule (ex: spanish ven ten pon sal di haz etc,) i suddenly realize that MOST english pronunciations are “exceptions” without strictly adhered rules and have SO much sympathy for people learning it 😭😭

    • @pug4pres
      @pug4pres Před 3 lety +3

      @@crstph The learning exceptions thing is so true. Because there are even a thousand different things we do in English that are irregular without us realizing it. Like if you say the word "Genre," "garaGe," "menaGerie," the "g" in those words is actually a different "g" than in the word "dog," "go," or "page,". Because the first three words come from French, they're pronounced differently, but there's no way to guess that unless you're familiar with what French words in English look/sound like!

    • @pug4pres
      @pug4pres Před 3 lety

      @@Ploiesti2001 😂😂

  • @chloe8387
    @chloe8387 Před 3 lety +144

    honestly once i got comfortable with korean it's been the most interesting thing to research... vowel harmony, hanja, the roots of words, pretty native korean words, even the yin-and-yang element to the language... (but i wish these things were taught from the start because it would have made learning easier when i realised it even applies to verb conjugation like 같다 - 같아, 돋다 - 돋아, 보다 - 보아/봐, 주다 - 주어/줘, 풀다 - 풀어 - the conjugated version almost always ends in a 'negative' or 'positive' ending depending on the vowel used in its root..) it's such a beautiful and deep language! i'm so glad i started learning korean 🥺

    • @rozaSkroza
      @rozaSkroza Před 3 lety +5

      could you please give me some info on books/apps/you tubers that you got this from. I feel huge love for this learning, you'd really help a fellow learner 😻

    • @jess.singswithleaves6
      @jess.singswithleaves6 Před 3 lety +6

      @@rozaSkroza Me too!!! I want to start learning, but what @chloe described is exactly what would keep me encouraged and engaged.

    • @Vlemode97
      @Vlemode97 Před 3 lety +2

      x3 on the info. Im just starting and i think it would help me a lot. I hate that they only tell you, is this way or that way but there never seem to be a reason why.

    • @Tallefier
      @Tallefier Před 3 lety +5

      Interesting. One of the first things taught at my University Korean class was the difference between what my teacher called happy vowels and non-happy vowels. Although traditionally it comes from the Heaven and Earth symbolism. 아,오 vs 어/우/이/으. Over the years I've heard people use different symbolisms to describe this concept of vowel harmony, but I always remember them as "happy" vowels.

    • @SparkleBrush
      @SparkleBrush Před 3 lety +2

      x4 ahh i would love to know where i could learn all of this as well

  • @aletskun3877
    @aletskun3877 Před rokem +1

    idk how good of a reference point his is, but knowing both english and spanish has made my journey into hangul so much easier. I have this references like "oh, this is just like how we say it in spanish!" and viceversa.

  • @diorbookstore
    @diorbookstore Před 2 lety +136

    I’m from Australia and I don’t know why but I have an urge to learn languages?? Anyway, I’m 15 and I speak 5 languages fluently and now I’m moving onto Korean, and honestly it has been the hardest one yet!! I don’t know why, but it just hasn’t clicked for me yet. I do remember that when I started Japanese it was similar, but there was a moment when all of a sudden the whole language just started to make sense. Thanks for this video! It was really helpful!!!

    • @kicha_woah
      @kicha_woah Před 2 lety +21

      FIVE????
      i’m 15 two and i’m struggling to learn korean 😭

    • @caecilius9578
      @caecilius9578 Před 2 lety +5

      which 5 do you speak?
      i speak english, latin and i’m conversational in spanish but i wouldn’t really say i can speak it bc i can read and understand it but it’s hard to write or reply fluently
      i’m in the mood for a new language tho lol and korean is calling to me

    • @ekang9612
      @ekang9612 Před 2 lety +17

      5 languages mastered at 15? Go join Mensa or something

    • @nayeonsgonnabeastar7546
      @nayeonsgonnabeastar7546 Před 2 lety +3

      @@ekang9612 I am 12 and I can talk in 3 languages fluently also 10% for Korean...

    • @ivana9892
      @ivana9892 Před 2 lety +4

      Im 13 and i know fluent croatian, English, a lil bit of german and french and learning korean rn😭not going well

  • @AliceCastaldi
    @AliceCastaldi Před 3 lety +300

    To anyone watching this and who might get discouraged to learn thinking that “this seems too hard” ...
    I find that with any language when you’re learning and speaking to a native speaker you shouldn’t feel shy to let them know that you’re not fluent (and/or still learning) ☺️ you’ll be surprised how much more faster you’ll learn when your friends / acquaintances will take the time to correct your mistakes and hence leaving them without feeling disrespected if you don’t use the proper words/ level of respect 😇

    • @AnnieIsaLau
      @AnnieIsaLau Před 2 lety +5

      Yes! I speak French and if someone told me they are learning, I would be super happy to help them learn and practice with them.

    • @cafebreve1
      @cafebreve1 Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you!! I was very stressed watching this video as I am only just learning the Korean alphabet hoping for some helpful tips ….

  • @m.4459
    @m.4459 Před 3 lety +202

    Laughed a little bit TOO much when you mentioned that "Grandma has a 'taek'" lol

  • @jek181818
    @jek181818 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you so much for letting people know Korean widely.

  • @Nabangi
    @Nabangi Před 2 lety +5

    As a Norwegian, korean prononciation is pretty easy and writing is a little bit harder, because in norway just like in korea the letter 'a' is mostly pronounced as a(sounds a little bit like ah), while in the US its pronounced like ay(i think), while the alphabet is completly different.

  • @elieblinksfem9443
    @elieblinksfem9443 Před 3 lety +273

    Now i'm really impressed by Lisa for learning korean language at the same time learning korean culture while training to improve her dancing and singing skills. What can i say

    • @krupak5727
      @krupak5727 Před 2 lety +4

      Lisa isn't Korean? I don't really know much about them....not in a offensive way.. where is she from?

    • @alonn3001
      @alonn3001 Před 2 lety +10

      @@krupak5727 She's from Thailand

    • @itsflowergaming4530
      @itsflowergaming4530 Před 2 lety +4

      @@krupak5727 she’s from Thailand but she had Korean classes,Korean friends, a full company and teachers,and she’s in South Korea not to mention jisoo and Jennie taught her new words every day so yeah it makes sence she caught on quickly

  • @No1PlutoSupporter
    @No1PlutoSupporter Před 3 lety +364

    Sooo what you’re saying is if you go to Korea and are learning Korean and someone hears you struggling and they speak to you in English just use ANOTHER language to pretend that you also don’t know English Ahahaha that’s what I did with scammers and guys that would try to talk to me bc I’m a foreigner. I just spoke Spanish if they spoke English to me

    • @spritezecplaysson2078
      @spritezecplaysson2078 Před 3 lety +40

      If i ever travel in the future I'm soo gunna use this!!! TY for sharing

    • @rahmathasan2793
      @rahmathasan2793 Před 3 lety +1

      😆😆😆😆 sounds fun to me but I haven't done it

    • @louisefuchs2086
      @louisefuchs2086 Před 3 lety +1

      I love that one

    • @crstph
      @crstph Před 3 lety +2

      WAIT THATS SO SMART AKDKAKKS

    • @heavenswheel3388
      @heavenswheel3388 Před 3 lety +2

      Or do what i do, and just continue speaking in the language. when im in india, the natives there always assume i cant speak tamil well cause i have a slight accent, so they switch to english and i just continue on in tamil like nothing happened XD

  • @summerladiona2715
    @summerladiona2715 Před rokem +2

    One thing I noticed when I started to learn korean a few days ago was that it was sort of similar to Japanese. Pronunciation, formal, polite, and casual ways to say things, and characters. Although my knowledge of Japanese is not much, it is helpful with my korean studies.

  • @gooeystranger7685
    @gooeystranger7685 Před rokem

    Just started learning the language. It clicks for me visually and I feel confident that I'll be able to speak, write and express with this beautiful language soon.

  • @devanshesingh8176
    @devanshesingh8176 Před 3 lety +124

    "I'm extremely unmotivated"
    - min yoongi and me too 😂

    • @galyleiacervantes9598
      @galyleiacervantes9598 Před 2 lety +1

      I don’t know why no one has complemented your profile pick. I love it 😍

    • @devanshesingh8176
      @devanshesingh8176 Před 2 lety

      @@galyleiacervantes9598 Aww , Thank you so much 💜

  • @schuuichiminamino
    @schuuichiminamino Před 3 lety +166

    As a Portuguese speaker that learned English, I know what you're talking about. In English you basically use take, get, keep for everything. And grammar structures are so much easier.
    For example, the present continuous, you just add -ing. In Portuguese, there are three different terminations depending of the verb -ando -endo -indo. It must be a nightmare for English speakers to figure out which one to use.

    • @angi4912
      @angi4912 Před 3 lety +20

      The worst thing english has is having vowels constantly changing their sound based on the word; like there is almost no logic in it, it's just, the way the word is pronounced. Other non-vowels also do that but not as often

    • @user-rh7bd2sh5g
      @user-rh7bd2sh5g Před 3 lety +2

      por outro lado, é muito mais prático quando tu aprende, pq n precisa ficar colocando sujeito em tudo, juro que sofro com isso até hj sksbsksbks

    • @k.5425
      @k.5425 Před 3 lety +6

      I'm learning Spanish and it's the same thing as in Portuguese.
      I dunno which preterite tense to use😭

    • @angi4912
      @angi4912 Před 3 lety +5

      @@k.5425 As a Spanish speaker, I wish you good luck

    • @Samurollie
      @Samurollie Před 3 lety +1

      Nossa, sim

  • @wonderstruck.
    @wonderstruck. Před rokem +2

    7:54 hehe there’s a secret THIRD level of eating politely 🤭 It’s 잡수다. I use it when talking to my grandparents

  • @handlenotaken
    @handlenotaken Před 7 měsíci +4

    6:20 The interesting thing about the pronunciation changes is that, when Hangul was first invented, people used to write things just like it sounded. But as time went by, this was actually found impractical.
    Pronunciation of words (morphemes to be precise, but let's ignore the difference for now) gets affected by words around them all the time. This happens in English too, and probably in a lot more languages.
    So writing them just as they sound means you'll see one word written differently depending on the words beside it. This makes recognizing words as you read a lot harder.
    Ex) If you write '한국말', '한국어' as they sound, it will be [한궁말], [한구거]. Then it is harder to recognize they both have '한국' in it.
    So, yeah. People decided to keep the words solid, but the pronunciation can still change depending on what comes before or next. Some rules are very obvious, some are more subtle.
    Pronunciation changes are caused by trying to speak comfortably. If two sounds next to each other are very different in how the sound is produced, it will be irritating to pronounce it just like it is written, syllable by syllable. So the sounds tend to 'move' in the sound chart to get closer. That's what's happening in [한궁말]. It's called 비음화(nasalization).
    If you listen to her after 6:20, you will see how '한궁말' is much more natural on the tongue than trying to say '한국말' exactly. Nobody can say [한국말] without cutting the air flow between '국' and '말'. That's because the sound of 'ㄱ' and 'ㅁ' are produced in different parts of your speech organs. Words with different sounds will get next to each other whether we like it or not, so bending sounds it is.
    To get a feeling for how pronunciations change by what's next to them, it might be helpful to think of how we say 'What's up?'. It is much more easier to say it like 'whachup?' or 'wassup?' then trying to maintain the exact pronunciation. There must be a better example, but this is what I got off the top of my head.
    tl;dr - Korean writing system (Hangul) decided that keeping words solid was more practical then writing exactly what it sounds like, because sounds change by environment.

  • @Misfitdruid
    @Misfitdruid Před 3 lety +336

    I started learning Korean on a quarantine whim and I am now sitting here like "wtf did I get myself into?" Unintentionally offending someone is my primary concern. Well, whenever I get to the point where I can actually say phrases or sentences, (not even close to that point yet). I think that's going to be the biggest hurdle of learning a language that is so closely tied to the culture. You don't run into that in English. If you mess up English while learning, you might have someone look at you in confusion, but you're unlikely to offend someone. Culture and language aren't tied together in English.

    • @officialbismah
      @officialbismah Před 3 lety +9

      Your right, i speak urdu which is mothers tongue and i realised about the language that if you mess up on the words they can really offend someone such as im learning spanish atm and when you say you to an elder you have to say “usted” if you say “tu” it can sound rude

    • @myself7232
      @myself7232 Před 3 lety +1

      should i learn japanese first?

    • @ChasMusic
      @ChasMusic Před 2 lety +9

      @@officialbismah In Spanish also if you're not actually friends. I accidentally used "tu" once with someone and it totally took all the enjoyment out of our conversation for them. But I've also had strangers "tu" me so there is likely geographic or generational variation. ¿But I'm not a mind reader so how would I know who is who?

    • @judgejung488
      @judgejung488 Před 2 lety +8

      한국인은 외국인의 말 실수에 매우 매우 너그러우니 걱정 마세요.

    • @alejandra2
      @alejandra2 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ChasMusic tu it's for people from your age or some years older (i feel like as an example, if you are 20 you could talk to someone who it's 27 by tu), usted it's for older people (like if you are 20 and talking to someone that's 40 years old i would use usted, but sometimes they want you to call them tu because some feel old when you use usted, you just let them tell you wich one they prefer, most times they joke about it but don't get upset) spanish it's not as strict as korean with the formal speaking, it's not like if you are 1 year older i call you señor, it's mostly how close you look to my age (i have seen people who are 20 years apart who call each other tu because the older person doesn't care) in resume to be safe if they look 15 or so years older than you try with usted and if they ask you to change it you can do it :)

  • @Ranee192
    @Ranee192 Před 3 lety +205

    I've been taking weekly Korean classes for about 2 years now and just sat for my TOPIK Beginners exam (nearly went crazy studying for it). And let me tell you.... The amount of times I screamed 'OMG YES EXACTLYYYY' during this video. I relate so much.

    • @sun-fx2rv
      @sun-fx2rv Před 2 lety +5

      Hi how was the topik exam am planning to take it to but am scared cause I recently started studying Korean and I want to try level 1 topik after 4 months or so help me out did you pass topik level 1

  • @fobypawz418
    @fobypawz418 Před rokem +1

    Wow! Thanks for the enlightening video! What an epiphany for me! Very profound insight! You are so right that, not only understanding a society's language, but their cutlure is very important to capture the nuances. It seems like there's so many tiers of Respect in the Korean Language. I think that's what makes a language so complicating is they way a society's level of respect in relation to their hierarchal structure is shown, but to understand that one thing alone can really help is mastery any language!

  • @wiwwii
    @wiwwii Před 3 lety

    your energy in ur rants… i love it

  • @miguelh8243
    @miguelh8243 Před 3 lety +269

    The part of learning Korean while at Korea is legit! Koreans expect you as a foreigner to speak in English, if they hear you struggle in Korean and if they speak better english (happens 90% with young people), conversation will be definitely switching to English and there you go, they put you back into your english confort zone. It has to be a decision you make consciously everyday, otherwise, u can spend 20 years in Korea and only speaking basic phrases lol

  • @BenefitCounterbench
    @BenefitCounterbench Před 3 lety +264

    "Korean grammar is hard."
    *laughs in Hungarian while learning Russian*

    • @user-si5mu3pz2f
      @user-si5mu3pz2f Před 3 lety +30

      I'm Korean and I know what you're saying. Korean is an agglutinative language. So, Korean grammar is extremely consistent and mostly lacks exceptions. Also, It doesn't have grammatical gender. So I would say that Korean is easier than Russian which has a ridiculous amount of grammatical rules. But Russian would be easier If you are a native speaker of Slavic languages.

    • @P5Master
      @P5Master Před 3 lety +9

      @@user-si5mu3pz2f yes, exactly, i'm fluent in russian and german, trying to learn korean as well. you have to "feel" a language, and korean seems a little hard. now i have to learn another "alphabet", god damn. XD

    • @IvanaMichaelis
      @IvanaMichaelis Před 3 lety +3

      @@user-si5mu3pz2f my first language is serbian and I agree. I also think it's easier for us to learn korean than someone whose mother tongue is english (because of grammar complexity, pronunciation..). It's also encouraging when you start to learn a third writing system the fact that you already know two (cyrillic)...

    • @sd-cardsoup1280
      @sd-cardsoup1280 Před 3 lety

      Have yall tried ancient greek grammar?

    • @tayyibali5052
      @tayyibali5052 Před 3 lety +1

      " Korean grammar is hard "
      Laughs in Pashto. A language that only a handful of people in the world speak. A language that is impossible to learn online and a language that has 2 main dialects. So pretty much you can only speak to like few thousand of people before the language changes. 😏🤫

  • @stopprocrastinating0
    @stopprocrastinating0 Před rokem

    I just loved your energy girll

  • @elipru9632
    @elipru9632 Před rokem

    LOVE your reality-check videos ^^
    I am not learning to become fluent but I love languages and learning, so thank you for sharing your experience!

  • @lynconmiranda3852
    @lynconmiranda3852 Před 3 lety +61

    I'm a Brazilian person, trying to learn korean in english
    with that being said, I need to emphasize that your accent in both languages is soooo smooth to my ears, just loved it 🥰
    also, you have such a great energy!

  • @maymelody
    @maymelody Před 3 lety +143

    when you want to learn japanese but you ended up here-

    • @angelic18
      @angelic18 Před 3 lety +1

      Lmao

    • @la-tf9kf
      @la-tf9kf Před 3 lety

      Huh 😭😭

    • @lalisamanobangs1350
      @lalisamanobangs1350 Před 3 lety +12

      I want to learn Japanese but I'm learning Korean rn 😭😭

    • @imogenkemp4626
      @imogenkemp4626 Před 3 lety +4

      @@lalisamanobangs1350 yeah you might wanna wait a year or you'll get them mixed, I tried Korean and french, yeah nah, get comfortable with one first ahah

    • @lalisamanobangs1350
      @lalisamanobangs1350 Před 3 lety +3

      @@imogenkemp4626 yeah and thanks for advice

  • @SaraHessXXIV
    @SaraHessXXIV Před rokem

    Omg, speak Korean like a natural! You've given me motivation to get better.

  • @sound.of.kkumaa
    @sound.of.kkumaa Před 11 měsíci

    Thank u so much ❤️ and I love your energy in every video u made ❤️❤️✨