Common Sentence Endings In Korean - TalkToMeInKorean
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- čas přidán 11. 04. 2017
- In this video lesson, teacher Hyunwoo introduces some sentence endings that you can commonly see Korean people use in day-to-day conversations and explains the meaning in each of them.
The sentence endings introduced in this video lesson are:
-요
-ㅂ니다
-(으/느)ㄴ 것 같아요
-(으)ㄹ 수도 있어요
-죠 or -지요
-(으/느)ㄴ데요
-네요
-세요
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"It seems like you are stupid" still sounds absolutely savage in English to me
rotfl.. I can't even say it without laughing ..
Same here 😂😊👍🏻
@@plantxarmybtsgrowth5776 lol
how is it savage...
I've noticed they also use it when they're cussing at someone. As if that somehow makes it better. Like, instead of calling someone a b*tch, they'll say "you seem like a b*tch"
I prefer longer, better explained videos liked this.
Well, you can always check endings in free PDF... i guess there is not really need to make another video about them, there is also podcast.
Jan Vlček I understand better when someone explains to me rather than me reading it^^
Like i said, there is Soundcloud podcast available ( audio ) its actually best way to use them together with PDF. :)
Jan Vlček i did not understand the podcast part because english is not my native language plus i don't use soundcloud 😂 but thanks, i learnt something new 😅😂
You actually dont have to use or register on Soundcloud, they provides embed players for TTMIK ( right on their website ) and it's in English, like this video. Np :)
"It seems like you are stupid" mic drop
HAHAHA
but I miss yoongi 😢
Armyyyyyyyy!!!!!💜
**ready "mic drop" in the comment**
me and my ARMY soul: **bam**
according to my calculations, I came to the conclusion that you are such a stupid person, it sounds like that haha
Is like a sheakespearean insult lol
"It seems like youre stupid" lmfaoo😂😂
I'm your 69th like
@@Mae-uf8bu and I am your first
i chocked on my food when he said it djbvfkj
In a polite way..........
I've never seen someone explain a language so clearly and precisely at the same time. This is amazing really. Giving literal translations first to then explain the global meaning is the very best way to make someone understand the logic of a language.
Thanks a lot for your great videos! :D
동의하죠!
Uncertain Nom agreee he seems so sincere of explaining korean.. like he's not gonna leave until we have understand lol
Uncertain Nom wow so amazing
동의합니다 is more correct! 하죠 is using as suggest in this particular situation.
it's really fun to watch :)
As a Korean, I wish I could speak English better to explain about Korean language to foreigners
korea best nation ever, greetings from Ukraine
Hmmm 😔
Your english is impressive though
Csp Sk can you plz show me how to say the second ending word? its confusing me
@@human-qi9mg it should sound like "-mnida"; a commonly used example is how many say thank you in korean: "kamsahamnida" (is how it's pronounced) but it's written gamsahabnida (감사합니다). 감사합니다 is one version of the second ending that is very commonly used, but usually in everyday speak you would not use this ending because it's pretty damn formal and if you wanted to be polite you would just use the first ending (-요). some instances where the second ending would be used is maybe like, on a news broadcast, when talking to someone on a level much higher than you, stuff like that. using it with your friends would be weird
Timestamps~
2:12 #1 -요
2:40 #2 -ㅂ니다
3:09 #3 -은/는/ㄴ 것 같아요
4:52 #4 -수도 있어요
6:08 #5 -죠/지요
8:40 #6 -ㄴ/는데요
13:04 #7 - 네요
14:39 #8 -세요
One of the most helpful Korean videos ever!! I have watched this SO MANY TIMES!!
Thank you!
Thank youuuuu
Y’all are most welcome!
Happy Studying ~ 화이팅!
Thanks a lot!!
@@alexa8257 My Pleasure!
Let me know if I can be of further assistance.
계속 열공하세요 ^^
this guy is brilliant at teaching . i could spend all day listening to him
Right
Same
Check Haily she teach better than him
“it..seems like.. you are stupid,,” i’m laughing
you didn't even look exhausted, didn't even sigh, spoke continually for 16 mins WOW
Geo R Gia the video is edited, if you look at his face carefully, you may see some clip shots. So, still props- it most probably, took longer than 16 minutes to film and even longer to edit and add all the animations.
Omg there's so much to learn i want to cryyyyyyyyyy
How is it going 9 months later?
@@nbd150 i think ill wait until i get job and money and learn from teacher
Same...same.
Armyyyyyyyy!!!!!💜💜💜
One step at a timeeee- break it down and take it slow and you will DEFINITELY get there!
what a champ, filming through the construction noise LOL
I didn't notice until he mentioned it though
What is so mind blowing is how Hyun Woo 선생님 has self taught himself English to where he is as good as a native , from my observation.
@@caseypenk your right, I'm a native and people always tell me I ain't got no good grammar
@@theodorekorehonen Tell me the full version of "aint", then reapply that to your sentence and tell me if it's right.
@@user-xr1rf8sj8e no
@@user-xr1rf8sj8e who gives a shit about grammar when speaking english XD
03 demian big fact
"It seems like you are stupid" lmaoo😂
That's very polite of you :D
VladimirMizich no I was quoting what he said in the video, it was funny
I was laughing so hard at that part "Sir, it seems to me that you are stupid. I hope you have a nice day." HAHAHAHA
lmao i completely missed that...
ikr lmao I have to scroll down to leave a comment in case no one else have 😂😂
I laughed imagining someone just walking up to you and saying it seems like you are kinda stupid
KKKKKKKK
This is a good example as to why KPOP is a good/bad way to learn 10:30 Korean.
"I wanna know 사탕처럼 달콤하다는데
I wanna know 하늘을 나는 것 같다는데..."
These lyrics from "What Is Love" always made me wonder what "...는데" was all about, but no translation made it obvious. No translation taught any meaning. But it stayed in my head until this lesson came around, better explaining it.
Self-teaching provides for a LOT of trial and error like this...
Is What is Love the song of EXO?
@@eylemsara3684 Twice
@@couchpotato6401 Oh, I saw. Thank you.
this lesson still doesn't help me understand the meaning lmao
"i wanna know (how to) be sweet just like a candy (???)
i wanna know (how) it's like to be the sky (???)"
i just saw the english translation and the second one is supposed to be "how it's like flying in the sky" and my mind is blown. it doesn't say flying anywhere in the lyrics lol. the lack of subject in the sentence makes translating korean to english a real struggle. props to translators honestly
@@DD-fh6gy 날다 is to fly; just like the verb "to know", 알다, when turning verbs with ㄹ as a 받침 into the descriptor (idk the official term, but in 는 것 같아 you are describing the noun 것 if that makes sense) you get rid of the ㄹ, 알다 is 아는 in present tense forms and 날다 is 나는; i think you thought it meant "i" haha, its just an irregular verb, which sounds complicated at first but honestly i picked up irregular verb rules and irregular pronounciations purely by listening, which im sure youre doing anyway
I am learning Korean without a teacher so these videos are EXTREMELY helpful for me! I talk to Koreans often and I enjoy being able to understand. I love your way of teaching Hyunwoo ssi.
Jessica Trivett I heard that just simply watching Korean TV for about 6 months makes your brain like subconsciously understand the language.
Mike Young not really but at the same time kinda because watching korean dramas gets you used the different dialects and the speed of when they talk but sadly you still have to study to fully understand
@@Randomnessextremez I have been watching for a year but only a few words are recognizable.
are you fluent now?
Watching Korean shows helps u to understand their expressions. I have a habit of talking to myself and I would say a phrase that I never I knew I knew of. It actually helps
THANK YOU FOR SAVING MY LIFE!!!!!!!!
Glad we can help!!!
Zehra Kalyoncu Şimdi bu hayatını kurtardı mı? 😂
Evet yaptı.
SARA Derken?
There are many components to teaching yourself to speak Korean online . One resource I found which succeeds in merging these is the Napars language learn (look for it on google) definately the most incredible remedy i've found. Look at all the extraordinary information .
Let's take a moment to appreciate how well Hyunwoo speaks English!
Me: Not reviewing for a test and being surprised I failed it.
Me looking on the mirror afterwards: 4:19
Incredibly helpful!! I really like this longer, detailed style of video 👍
I'm guessing this is Sarah hahaha didn't expect to see you here 😄
Yaaasss
omg... and I thought Koreans just liked to make rhymes at the end of every phrase in kdramas😂😂😂
Caroline I'm dying 😂😂😂😭💀
tamari12453 i'm crying at my stupidity and laughing at the same time 😂😭
Caroline omg I thought the same also in korean songs I thought they're just making rhymes wtf😂😂
Hahahahahahah you made my day 😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂
It blows my mind that at one point in my life, I studied Korean for ten years and I never once learned 은 것 같아요. I am so happy now.
"It feels like you are stupid" 😂 it's interesting how much nuance is built into the endings
The sentence endings introduced in this video lesson are:
-요
-ㅂ니다
-(으/느)ㄴ 것 같아요
-(으)ㄹ 수도 있어요
-죠 or -지요
-(으/느)ㄴ데요
-네요
-세요
Check out our free Korean lessons here: talktomeinkorean.com
Take a Korean level test and find the right materials for you!: www.talktomeinkorean.com/level-test/
저는 한국에 살고 있어요.. 도 배우고싶어요.. ㅋㅋㅋ
Thanks
but what’s 십시오 though?
Really helpful😍😍😍
감사함니다
These longform videos are fantastic. I really prefer them. Thanks!
I feel so proud to myself when I realized that I know all the verb endings he discussed....! Thank you, Hyun Woo 선생님
yes, me too. It is amazing to learn Korea here!
I'm korean and i think this class explains the most important part of korean. In my culture there is a rule that younger man should respect senior man so if you are younger than someone or in first meet, you must use a specifically polite language, called "존댓말"
I'm sure Korean sounds impossible to many foreigners. For us Turks, it all makes sense. I have been learning Korean for 3 weeks now and I've been thinking "oh they have this too" all the time.. Western languages are more like digital while Turkish and Korean are analogue languages. Feelings, moods, politeness levels, verbs at the end, many different meanings of an expression, many expressions for the same meaning... One thing I wonder is what type of Koreans use the less polite forms? All the Koreans are like super nice and polite, joeneun katdayo. :) Big love from Istanbul!
Hypno Istanbul I know it hasn't been that long since your comment but how is your Korean today ?
I can say I've learned the structure. Trying to practice with Korean friends, having people to practice with around helps a lot. I just need to learn the vocabulary. It's the hardest part. Since Korean doesn't have as many sounds as other languages, all words sound quite similar, so it's hard to keep them in mind and easy to confuse words with each other. But I promised myself to be a fluent speaker by the spring 2018.. :)
That's a lofty goal . I'm Korean myself but came to the US at 6.5 and 41 now but never got a really good foundation to build on especially since I never had the chance to attend even kindergarten before coming. I find the more complex structure much more difficult when the sentences are more advanced and compounded. I'll sometimes be reading something in English and think " how would this be structured in Korean ?" and find it almost impossible to piece together. The basic structure is SUBJECT-OBJECT-VERB but that's only helpful to a certain point. I'm always so impressed by foreigners who can speak so well because it can get so confusing. I hope you're fluent by your target time frame ! Maybe you'll post some videos then ?
Yes, it's a complex language but as I said in my comment, I'm Turkish
and these two languages are surprisingly similar. Like; Jeo-neun jib-e ga-yo / Ben ev-e gidi-yorum. Even the negative suffix "ma,
me" is the same. This kind of stuff helps a bit. I don't suggest you
scare yourself with complex sentences. You'll get there. When I first
started to learn English, it looked impossible. Now it's not :)
@@hypnoistanbul9359 I'm really curious how, how good is your Korean now? :D
I have regents next week and I should be studying for that but I'm here desperate to understand Bangtan Bombs.
So we can understand the subtitles lol and also in VLive
For me it's the Hard Carry Series of Got7 😂
@@user-jr1cz9ph6j lol that comment I made is old, already learned korean
@@m.j.r.4676 Like mastered korean ? And now can understand bangtan bom without subs ? Woah
@@user-jr1cz9ph6j yeah I lol
현우씨, 대단히 감사합니다. 뭐라 감사해야 할지 모르겠어요. This guy, right here, and the rest of the wonderful team at TTMIK have done wonders to my Korean learning experience. They deserve national awards or medals for their efforts in helping foreigners like me master the Korean language. I've been listening to their podcast for almost two years now and I'm now in Level 6. Having been studying Korean for almost two years, I've struggled with sentence endings. I always played it safe by using the vanilla 요 endings but you can't always sound natural using that alone. This video blew my mind and had me scribbling away in my Korean study notebook. Three pages later and after applying my memorization skills, I think I got it. Can't wait to brag talk with my Korean friends this weekend. My Kakaotalk chatroom pals will also feel the difference. 화이팅! 앞으로도 즐겁게 공부합시다.
Deborah Abike what is your kakaotalk? I'm also studying Korean. I would like more friends who speak/ are learning Korean too
저도여
as somebody who's somewhat passed the beginner phase of learning korean but still so far from understanding more advanced grammars, contexts, and numerous words to memorize, videos like this help me a lot to understand what's going on when I'm watching variety shows or drama. like this helps to fill some knowledge gaps here and there and helps as a crutch when I'm finally reaching that chapter in a book, so I'm really grateful for videos like this. thank you very much!
can u tell me how u got past the beginning stages? 을를, 은는, and 이가 are KILLING me
One of my favourite things about Korean and honourifics/politeness is "죽을래요". Like. Even when people are being rude, they're trying to be somewhat respectful.
(I like these videos lengthwise. For "-(으/느)ㄴ데요 ", specifically with the construction example, it's kind of like "yeah, and?")
This is my first day at learning korean... & I've already watched 12 videos; this is the thirteenth one... & here at this junction I must say that korean must be a great language; because in order to be this great at english, your language has to be great first !
Also, I realised that Koreans are great teachers as well, of course, apart from being wonderful people.
I wish someday I visit Korea.
Love you people... From India.
I'm also Indian learning Korean to understand bangtan bomb
To think that I was so confused when I first watched this videos, thinking that there are only two/three sentence endings, to now knowing almost all of them after having studied and now revisiting the video the second time. I'm proud of myself lol. 감사합니다❤️
Hyun Woo is very good at teaching. He gives great explanations and examples. It’s kinda a lot to absorb but good thing it’s on video so we can pause or reply at any time. This is actually my first time viewing a lesson with Hyun Woo and I’m impressed. I’ll definitely be viewing previous lessons and looking forward to future ones too. Great job Hyun Woo👍😊
Really it's much more effective than the others korean online class.
And your presentation and and English pronunciation both are correct and pleasing.
This qualitiful type of teaching can help us to learn Korea language as early as soon. Thank you...
im korean and still watching this video. XD
Lmaoooo xD
😂😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂
Looooool!
Me too. i am KOREAN but it's still very useful hahaha
It's crazy how I knew all these sentence structures and this is just second nature to me all thanks to watching dramas and shows. I have never studied Korean before but these expressions are just natural to me and I don't even have to think about it. Still, these can be very hard to explain to a beginner and teacher Sun does it so clearly and effectively.
I watched this video at the very beginning of my learning (like one week in lol) and was on the verge of tears because I couldn’t understand it. Now I’m almost three months in and I can understand it! I’m so happy! I’m not a 바보!
I love how you explain them so well. It helps me understand better.
거든/ 거든요 is also a way of ending sentences that I'm curious about. Yesterday I saw the video and kept thinking about other sentence endings. When I watch doramas/dramas or TV shows I hear this a lot.
Nathália Brandāo I love those endings! My Korean friend taught me that it's an emphasis ending- kind of ... pushy? She used a different word, but I can't think of it right now. "아니거든" "that *really* isn't it!"
I wish I could remember the word she used. Even with 요, I probably would only use that phrase with friends and not people I just met.
Nathália Brandāo Check out level 6 lesson 17. It explains that ending. ^.^
talktomeinkorean.com/lessons/l6l17/
AnAutumnRose Thank you so much. It's really cool how this endings can mean so much and just conect with the phrases with a flow. In my native language there's nothing like that.
mendedheart26 Thank you ♡
A book I have covered this early on as "because, since, let me tell you", when you can't use 어서
because there is no other clause. e.g. 왜 안 오세요? 바쁘거든요. I've never
actually encountered it though, so it's interesting you see it often!
All I can say is Koreans are extremely intelligent for memorizing all those what seem like figures to me and the Korean alphabet and still they can speak English and write it better than many Americans and still they study all the other subjects math, history, sciences. It's too much I'm truly impressed.
something i actually enjoy about learning korean is that the important information in sentences usually doesn't come until the end. as a native english speaker, i've spent my entire life making assumptions, even if i don't mean to, about what someone is going to say, the direction a conversation is going in, etc. korean forces me to stop doing that and really listen for the content and context of a sentence, which is kind of a nice breather from overthinking what someone is going to say!
I find these longer videos better for studying, and I tend to click on these more than the short minute or 2 minute vids. Sentence endings was the hardest bit for me when I was studying for the TOPIK!
I was literally freaking out because I didn't know how to respond to a penpal without saying plain "-요" sentences. Then this conveniently pops up on the side suggestions. THANK YOU SO MUCH. 정말 고맙습니다!
This was VERY helpful! I tend to learn by listening and some verb endings I have picked up from hearing them over and over and seeing the translations. But, seeing them broken down like this, helps nail down the meanings for me. Thank you very much!
I've always been confused and curious about these korean sentence endings whenever I watch something in Korean. This video is great and helpful. I'm just new with this TTMIK. I wish I have discovered this team a lot more sooner. I could be more good in Korean by now. I have a LOT to catch up. 😓
Please make a video about badchim (받침).
I noticed at you were not pronouncing most of the -ㅆ at the badchim. Please explain how to pronounce these.
Thank you for your hard work.
감사합니다.
리 아 ❤️
MissManagerK up
I’m studying Korean in my classes as well as self studying. He doesn’t pronounce the -ㅆ 받침 because there’s nothing to carry the sound over. An example is 있다면 vs 있어요. The pronunciation rule is that the character ㅇ carries over the 받침, so looking at 있다면, you would pronounce it as “it-da-myeon” because the ㅇ character is not present after the 받침 to carry the sound over, whereas 있어요 (“i-soh-yo) has the ㅇ character that carries the sound over. I hope this helps!
There are many cases that one must familiarize especially for 받침. For 생각나 (seang-gak-na) but pronounced as seang-gang-na. For 감사합니다 (Kam-sa-hap-ni-da) but pronounced as kam-sa-ham-ni-da. Also for 있는데 (iss-neun-de -> it-neunde) but pronounced as in-neun-de.. I skipped some cases but yeah there are many xD
Sasha Feria, Music Lover
Omg you do not know how much you helped. Everything makes sooo much more sense now!
@@suddenlystanning8307 there are so many cases. hopefully you can learn all of them in no time 😀😀
kinda surprised you didn't include the 거든요 ending but still very helpful! a part 2 would be awesome
I love how very detailed the infornations they teach you. I definetly recommend this channel. No regrets.
Literally one of the best Korean language lessons on CZcams!
Single most useful Korean language learning video I have ever watched, other than what the alphabet is.
PLEASE Make more videos like this!! I have been trying to understand "-ㄴ데요" for SO long and I couldn't find a good explanation, even my Korean friends couldn't find a way to explain it. Thank you so much :):):)))
I like detailed videos, especially since we can listen to it while doing something. It's like a real teacher is here. Nicely done.
it's soo comprehensible. you're da one of those best teachers I ever faced.
I really like this longer more detailed format! More please! ☺️
Very helpful!! Prefer longer detailed videos like this so i can understand better. Pls make more of these! ❤️
I love this videos because they’re not only very informative and educational but the editing and graphics are very visually pleasing too.
Omg I wish this video was recommended to me sooner. Easily one of your best, most useful videos. Thank you so much for being so concise!
I've heard a lot of sentences end in "잖아요". I'd like to learn more about when and how to use this type of grammar!
Probably you know this already, but that ending is to express that something is obvious, like saying: don't you see? Personally I find it rude, I don't like when people speak like that.
I don't normally comment on your videos, but this video is so well done, I feel it should be commended for the efforts put into this. I feel a lot of people trying to learn Korean tends to mix up the ending of a sentence, such as myself. I often try to form sentences and have a mindset that always ending with -요 is boring, so I change it to -는데요 because I watch Korean dramas and shows. I feel for the next video, you can do an extension to this video, which is the starting of a sentence. Because a lot of time, when people try to speak in Korean when they first start out, they want to try to speak more, but struggle, like myself. I feel if there is a video showing different ways to open a conversation, it will help convey our thoughts better in conversations. Thank you again for the videos!
The most precious jewel of TTMIK...
I keep coming back to this..
Pls do more of these common ending..
This is good. Piece by piece. Thankyou for doing these short videos like this. It does help!
This by far, one of the best Korean learning videos on CZcams! I constantly rewatch it, and learn something new each time. ☺
I really liked the format of this video! It took just the right amount of time to explain the literal and understood translations as well as demonstrating helpful, real world examples. Thank you so much :)
Videos from TTMIK never make me disappointed! Thank you so much
Perfect format, short enough to really understand and remember and meaningful enough to be useful. Thank you very much!
This video is very helpful.👍 The duration, I think it's ok. I'm a little bit confused of sentence ending '-던'. Could you please explain it. 감사합니다
Sorta Christina I'm fairly sure that it is used at a retrospective modifier? E.g. 만나고 싶던 사람 = a person I wanted to meet
hi i want to talk with sombady .. can i find somone help me...
This was literally the perfect topic! I've always noticed these ending sentence structures but I can never pick up patterns regarding what they actually mean. I hope you will continue to make more of these videos!!
This channel has been very instrumental in my journey to self learning Korean language. Thank you.
I love your detailed explanation of different rules in speaking Korean. Thank you!
great graphics and animations! it really helps me unerstand the concepts you are explaining
This was the best korean explanation of sentence structure i've seen! as someone who's learning korean, this is such a pleasure to watch! makes life easier!!!! 감사합니다😊
I love the way he explains everything:) I watched a lot of videos and different channels but his explanation and voice makes it seem so much easier for some reason. I totally love it!
The lengthy video is so much more helpful and insightful. Please continue making these. Thank you
I really like these types of longer videos, keep it up!
This video was so helpful! Kudos to your method of teaching !! You go straight to the point and explain the most important things that are very useful in the day-to-day!😊👍🏼
its absolute fun listen to this teacher he is very clear and soft on the eye as well...
This is my first time in your channel and I found your format, topic, and explanation very unique, practical and conversational. A lot of books, apps and channels teach the basics but this channel is going the extra mile by providing context and explaining the intricacies and quirks of the language. This, more or less, answered/cleared my mental questions/confusion whenever I watch Koreans converse. Keep it up!
I need Korean friends to improve my speaking in Korean .❤️❤️
These videos are definitely helpful. Lengthy ones give me more information, understanding, and insight on the language. Thank you so much!
This video format was AMAZING. I absolutely LOVED IT. Please please please do more of those, it was well explained, easy to understand and the little animations and the way it was edited was so helpful. Thank you so much, I finally have an answer on what the ending 는데요 means !
Thank you for summarizing the many different sentence endings that we learned individually in the podcast. I think this format is especially useful for reviewing. But probably not when you are first introducing a new sentence ending.
This is an EXCELLENT video because it's just what I needed. I'm learning to recognise sentences endings to help me understand speech more easily. The length of the video was fine for me. Really great job. Thank you TTMIK!
Thank you! Great refresher video for your lessons, and it's nice to have it more condensed with new examples. This length of video is ideal btw.
this format is very helpful. It explains a lot and makes it easy to understand by breaking down sentences and showing how endings work.
I like these types of detailed videos. It explains the use of the endings quite well so it makes sense when building our sentences. Seeing it written down is great too. I like that you pronounce it slower so it is easy for me to follow. Thank you for taking the time to make these videos.
Notes: Common sentence endings
Feel free to use these to study!
•Fundamental differences
- sentence beginnings in English
-Contains important information
. Do you want to
.Do you mind if
.Did you
.How did you
.Etc
-Important in English for information
-Korean “beginnings” are in the end of the sentence
•Korean Endings
- 요
.Person is being “formal” and/or “polite”
.존댓말 (Polite Language)
-ㅂ니다
.Also Polite and formal
.More polite than 요
.존댓말 (Polite language)
-은것같아요/는것같아요/ㄴ것같아요
.Comes from 같다 (To be the same)
.It seems like/it looks like/it feels like
.Main meaning : I think
.Used to be more polite
-를숙도있어요/을수도있어요/ㄹ수도있어요
.That possibility also exists/it might
.수있다 means can/possibility
.도 means also
-죠
.Short for 지요
.Asking for somebody to agree with you
.No you’re wrong, I’m correct
.Can also mean of course
-ㄴ데요/는데요
. Comes from 그런데 - but/and
.Your sentence hasn’t ended
.You want the other persons participation
-네요
.Agreeing with someone
.What you noticed
-세요
.Contains honorific suffix 시
.A command
the most important video about korean lenguage ever. Please make a second one :')
Wow i was into studying Korean a lot before, but now I just kind of been enjoying music and kdramas without really being too serious about studying. After watching this video, i noticed that i picked up on some of these patterns naturally through immersion, i even understood/translated some words that i didn't know i knew😮
Thank you and this has given me more inspiration to take my studying seriously. 정말 감사합니다
Thank you for this video. As a Korean-American, I find it difficult to explain what some of these endings mean when I explain to my non-Korean speaking friends. You did a great job explaining them.
This was such a great video! I am still a beginner Korean student, but it's cool to occasionally "look ahead" at slightly more advanced but still understandable (for my current level) grammar points like these endings, to keep me interested & motivated. I really liked how detailed the example scenarios and connotations of each ending were, because it's often hard to grasp the exact nuances that a target language grammar pattern or structure conveys from just a short definition, so the elaborated explanations gave me a more concrete idea! 😁
"it seems like I think you're stupid" I CAN'T STOP LAUGHING JSSJSJSJS
I saw this comment when this acted in the video lol
I've been learning a lot through your videos, please continue this format. It's easy to learn with practical examples similar to the ones in your videos.
i appreciate the longer video going in depth on the nuanced differences. i struggle knowing when to choose what ending and switching between formal and informal so this was very beneficial. thank you☺️
This is by far the most helpful Korean language video I've ever seen. I have been wondering for months why I hear so many different endings to sentences. Where would you recommend I look to find a listing of all possible endings?
Awesomeness!! When things are broken down like this I know I learn better!! I love it! I'm looking forward to more videos!!
This video is SO helpful!!
I have rewatched it multiple times since it came out because there is so much helpful information in it!
Been watching quite a number of your videos and CZcams recommended this old clip. I love all your teaching and explanation, it's very concise, easy to understand with the examples you gave. 너무 감사합니다~