This lesson
introduces words to talk about university subjects, the different university degrees, and some examples using these
words together in a sentence.
Review the flashcards for this lesson! Click on the buttons or use the keyboard to review the cards. Once you get a
card right five times, the card is moved to the known cards stack, and a new card will be added to your working
cards stack. Try to learn them all!
Always wondered how
to use Korean websites? While some technology-related words are borrowed from English, a lot of words are proper to
Korean, and are sometimes hard to find in dictionary. This lesson includes common Internet nouns and verbs to help
you use the Internet.
Review the flashcards for this lesson! Click on the buttons or use the keyboard to review the cards. Once you get a
card right five times, the card is moved to the known cards stack, and a new card will be added to your working
cards stack. Try to learn them all!
An invaluable
resource for Korean learners, Routledge's A Frequency Dictionary of Korean: Core Vocabulary for Learners catalogs
the 5,000 most frequent Korean words with their pronunciation and an example sentence for each. This book is very
useful for several reasons:
– Thematic vocabulary lists: 24 inserts throughout the book are dedicated to the most frequent words about a
single topic. Useful to quickly memorize conversational words. See the sample page below for an example. – An alphabetical index at the end of the book helps quickly find any Korean word present in the book. – Each word is accompanied by a sample sentence. Really useful to understand how the word fits within a
sentence and the grammatical patterns associated with them.
Eel is a popular fish in East Asian countries. Korea has a lot of dishes featuring eel, some of the most popular being 장어구이, or grilled eel; 장어강정, or eel with a sweet soy sauce glaze, and 장어덮밥, or eel over rice.
장어구이, or grilled eel.
The popular saying in Korea is that men should eat eel to improve their performance behind closed doors…
Learn some
essential food vocabulary to eat out with friends! Learn new adjectives, the name of famous drinks, some food words,
and several sentences to order food and show appreciation. Download the study sheet
and take it to go!
Review the flashcards for this lesson! Click on the buttons or use the keyboard to review the cards. Once you get a
card right five times, the card is moved to the known cards stack, and a new card will be added to your working
cards stack. Try to learn them all!
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Counting things and people in Korean is slightly different with most western languages in that a "counter" word needs to be added after the number; the counter to use depends on the nature of the object or person talked about. The list below lists all the counters encountered in most situations.
There are two types of counters in Korean: counters that are used with native Korean numbers (하나, 둘, 셋...) and counters that are used with Sino-Korean numbers (일, 이, 삼...); the associations between each counter and the corresponding numeral system need to be memorized (counters used with native Korean numbers can have a Chinese origin, and counters used with Sino-Korean numbers can have a Korean origin).