how is writing hangul out in alphabet helping you learn korean at all?
Learning Korean - Page 5
Blogs > G.s)NarutO |
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Chill
Calgary25964 Posts
how is writing hangul out in alphabet helping you learn korean at all? | ||
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Rekrul
Korea (South)17174 Posts
naruto will never learn korean lmao | ||
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Rekrul
Korea (South)17174 Posts
'μ κΉμ κΉλ§...' ??? 'λ μ¬κΈ° μ¬μλ μμ£Ό μλλ΄...μ λ λ¨Ήκ³ μ¬κΈ° μ€κ³ μ λ¨Ήκ³ ...κ·ΈμΉ??' *λ μκ°: ν γ»μν΄γ γ μΆ¬ν;γ £λ¬γ γ γ * μ....κ°λ? 'κ·Έλ°κ³ μμμ΄' *μ¬μ μΌμ΄λ¬μ΄, λΉ λκ°μ΄* *λ μκ°: λ΄ μΈμμμ΄λ* *λ μ§ νΌμ λ€ λ§μ ¨μ΄* well whatever, it could be worse! ^---1 of the best moments of my life | ||
NarutO
Germany18839 Posts
On January 14 2010 03:48 Chill wrote: how is writing hangul out in alphabet helping you learn korean at all? I get used to the letters when I write them down etc-_-; works for me. | ||
NarutO
Germany18839 Posts
On January 14 2010 03:49 Rekrul wrote: yeah true, its completely retarded as you can learn that stuff and master it in a matter of hours naruto will never learn korean lmao Shut up ![]() | ||
JIJIyO
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Canada1957 Posts
All I know in Korean =( Time to start learning γ γ γ Let's do it Naruto. Sounds like something someone in the anime would say lol. | ||
ghostWriter
United States3302 Posts
λ for dan? I was like "what is hell that?" for a minute. Can't make your intentions so obvious -_- | ||
NarutO
Germany18839 Posts
to be to do to want (to) etc... Would be awesome ![]() | ||
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zatic
Zurich15313 Posts
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NarutO
Germany18839 Posts
On January 14 2010 16:38 zatic wrote: http://www.learnkoreanlanguage.com/Korean-Verbs.html thanks. | ||
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zatic
Zurich15313 Posts
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GTR
51342 Posts
On January 14 2010 17:10 zatic wrote: Also http://www.teamliquid.net/tlpd/players/flashcards.php neato except when i do it without the hint it becomes near impossible (who the fuck knows the real name of bejjezerg) | ||
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Rekrul
Korea (South)17174 Posts
On January 14 2010 16:36 G.s)NarutO wrote: Can someone post most common verbs + conjugation? In Korean obviously T_T to be to do to want (to) etc... Would be awesome ![]() to be: λ λμ΄λ€. 'i am mother fucking rekrul' to do: μ§κΈ λνν μλͺ»κ°λ₯΄μ³νκ³ μκ±°λ 'i am teaching you now' to want to: λ루ν νν νΌλμν€κ³ μΆμ§λ (i want to help naruto) | ||
NarutO
Germany18839 Posts
I for my part think it has to be geun/keun and neun. Just like this νκΈ would mean hangeul and not hangul. Shouldn't you use γ as u?; | ||
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Rekrul
Korea (South)17174 Posts
only can the true pronunciation be written with korean characters, not romanticized, whether or not its gun or geun is always up to the site and or person based on how fucking retarded they are | ||
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zatic
Zurich15313 Posts
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NarutO
Germany18839 Posts
On January 14 2010 18:57 Rekrul wrote: neither are right only can the true pronunciation be written with korean characters, not romanticized, whether or not its gun or geun is always up to the site and or person based on how fucking retarded they are kk ![]() | ||
konadora
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Singapore66072 Posts
μ¬κΈ°μ νκ΅λ§ λ§ν΄λ λλ€! γ γ γ + Show Spoiler + ν¬κΈ°ν΄. | ||
IdrA
United States11541 Posts
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NarutO
Germany18839 Posts
On January 14 2010 20:00 IdrA wrote: whats the difference between μ΄/κ° and μ/λ markers? i know μ΄/κ° is supposed to be used for subjects but half the time it seems like μ/λ is used pretty much the same way From a Korean on a forum: μ΄/κ° put emphasize on the next word(a verb, a noun, an adjective), and -μ/λ put emphasize on the subject. νκ΅λ§μ΄ *μ¬λ―Έμμ΄μ*. Korean is INTERESTING. *νκ΅λ§*μ μ¬λ―Έμμ΄μ. KOREAN is interesting. These above aren't very natural to say by theirselves as the two words are emphasized with no giving the context. μ΄κ²μ΄ *μ°ν*μ΄μμ. This is A PENCIL. *μ΄κ²*μ μ°νμ΄μμ. THIS is a pencil. Korean speakers don't always use postpositions. Just know some situations you should use it. When you introduce yourself to people, "μ λ Avannμ΄μμ." is most natural. By now, you'd know 'λ' emphasizes 'μ ' in it. To put emphasize on something earns a profit in general. Getting attention from other people. And if you're going to say something opposite to what someone has said right before you speak, using one of postpositions would make your Korean shine. A : Who broke this? μ΄κ±° λκ° κΉ¨λ¨λ Έμ΄? (to B)You did it, right? λ€κ° κ·Έλ¬μ§? B : I didn't do it. λ΄κ° μ νμ΄. If B answered "λ(λλ) μ νμ΄.", this implies someone else did it. Hope this helps. | ||
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