Note: The words can, may and must are Modals. The following English irregular verbs are often used in the standard past and participle forms (-ed). We do not foresee all the irregular verbs ever being standardized, but some of the more minor variations in less commonly used words will probably disappear in the next genration or two. The trend, in English, and especially in American English, is to standardize the irregular verbs. 괜찮아, 괜찮아요.The irregular verbs in a table infinitive.Try to watch it first without the subtitles and then go back again with the CC on and see how much you understood!Įnter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email. This video is also subtitled in Japanese so you can switch to that translation as well. To help you out some for words you may not understand, just click the CC button for English translation. The video is completely in Korean but it has built-in subtitles, that are in Korean to help you follow along if you’re working on listening and/or reading. Sometimes I find makeup tutorials like this and share them when I find them because for the beauty gurus that follow me but also want to practice Korean, it’s super helpful! And this is no different, especially if you’re a fan of iKON. Well, this is a video I thought would be helpful. Maybe you’ve been searching for ways to practice reading in Korean or even working on your listening but the things you’ve been finding aren’t all that interesting or maybe they’re not something you would use in everyday speech. Normally, I kinda just watch them and then move on to find some more new music but I noticed something about this video that I really wanted to share with you guys. Okay so I was just scrolling through YouTube today when I ran across this video. Everything isn’t going to be 100% grammatically correct but understand it’s because you’re still learning (as am I) so don’t be too hard on yourself. For example, “갈색 개 (galsaeg gae) = brown dog”. Also, you can combine last weeks colors with this week’s animals. We’ll probably cover that again as I think that was a bit too advanced for the moment. We’ve gone over household items and body parts in the past. So it was days of the week, months, colors, now animals. Now I know you’re probably wondering why these lists have been kinda, “childish”, but when you’re learning a new language, you have to start somewhere. Vocabulary List: The list this week is animals! This is a short list but I’ll probably add on to it next week. If you notice in both examples, I tried incorporated the Grammar of the Week as well with the usage of him/her. Same as before, verbs come at the end of the sentence.) Sentence breakdown:: (그녀를 (geunyeoleul) = her the 를 particle makes this the object of the sentence.(naneun geunyeoleul mannalgessda.) = I will meet her. Verbs and adjectives go at the end of the sentence.) Sentence breakdown:: (어제 = yesterday) (그를 = him, the 를 particle makes this the object of the sentence.(eoje geuleul mannassda.) = I met him yesterday. Today, we’re going to look at this word through future tense/past tense conjugations. It’s usually conjugated and said as, “ 만나 (manna), 만나요 (mannayo) or 만났어요 (mannasseoyo)” among other various conjugations. You probably hear this word more often than you think you do. ***Just a reminder, if you have a suggestion for the WOTD or Grammar of the Week, comment below and I’ll feature it!** Also, today is Vocabulary Day! Check the end of the post for the full vocabulary list this week. So, I dug into my mental archives and thought, 만나다 (mannada) would be a good verb to return too. I think that’s more productive and more useful. But I realize, it’s time to stop defining words and time to start finding ways to use the words. This word is one I’ve posted about before.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |