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Nataly 🎐
What's the difference between '절대(로)' and '절대'?
In a book I have it says that '절대' means 'absolutely' and '절대(로)' means 'absolutely not'. I just didn't know if the particle -로 can mean 'not'?
Jul 24, 2019 11:19 PM
Answers · 3
1
1) '절대' and '절대로' ― their meanings are identical, nuances being scarcely different.
절대 그곳에 가면 안 돼.
절대로 그곳에 가면 안 돼.
(You must not go there : same)
2) Yes, you must use '절대' or '절대로' in only negative sentences. When positive, you use '무조건', '반드시', '꼭' and so on, instead.
절대로 가지 마!
(Never go there!)
*절대 가! / *절대 태보해!
(Must go???) (Must do Taebo???) They're all wrong expressions.
※ 絶対できるよ。(It must work. / You can do it.)
(In Japanese it seems you can use 「絶対(zettai)」 at positive position, which is impossible in Korean grammar. Better not confuse it.)
July 25, 2019
Also.. is 절대 used in negative sentences?
July 25, 2019
I very much doubt that. ~로 is a suffix, meaning something like "by/of/in". Like travel by train - 기차로 간다, speaking in Korean - 한국어로 말한다, it's made of wood - 나무로 만들었다.
July 25, 2019
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Nataly 🎐
Language Skills
English, French, Korean, Spanish
Learning Language
English, French, Korean, Spanish
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