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Marius
Asking confirmation in Korean - "isn' it?" / "Don't you agree?"
I've been asking my Korean friends about this for quite some time, but so far the answers have been quite contradictory :)
I would like to know how to form this pattern in Korean:
"It's cold, ISN'T IT?" // "Oh, tasty, DON'T YOU THINK?" // "Funny, RIGHT?"
You know, that classic way to ask in a casual manner if the other person agrees. As far as I know, Japanese people use the suffix "ne" like it "Sugoi ne?" to do this.
Is there such a simple way in Korean?
Koreans told me I should use forms like
"재미있어, 재미없어?"
OR
"재미있어. 아니면?"
OR
"재미있어. 아니?"
But maybe there is a better way? What about the suffix "네요"? Can I use this?
17 nov. 2012 16:05
Antwoorden · 5
1
すごいね
대단하구나.
すごいですね
대단하군요.
........................................................In Korean............................................................
재미있네, (재미없니?) 그렇지 않니?
18 november 2012
What you're looking for is "그치?". For example, "재미있어, 그치?", "재미없어, 그치?" I think we say 재미있지? more often although it may not fit *perfectly* in the English sentence with the tag question. With 재미있지, you're kind of sure that the listener will agree with you. I don't think this case is where the 네 suffix could be applied to.
18 november 2012
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
Marius
Taalvaardigheden
Engels, Duits, Koreaans
Taal die wordt geleerd
Koreaans
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