maixen
who can tell me the basic korean language?..:) thanks in advance i just want to know the basic korean language and how to write korean words..:)
2 de jul de 2012 08:46
Respostas · 5
Hi Maixen I myself just started learning the language and here's how the course I attended went. We started learning the characters called Hangul. You can actually google it and you'll find many resources. It's not that many characters and relatively easy to remember especially it also has two sets- vowels and one consonants. Pretty direct in that sense. We learned how to pronounce them and their likely romanized forms. Also we learned fundamental phrases like annyeonghaseyo. If you break that down to an-nyeong-ha-se-yo, you can easily derive the Hangul form of it 안-녕-하-세-요... 안녕하세요. Look at some Hangul chart/table and figure how the romanized form is translated to Hangul. This is how I started - romanized to hangul translation. But along the way, as I learned to understand how they are pronounced and written, they started to come a little bit more naturally. Along with learning Hangul is the introduction to basic vocabularies like Korean words for dog, cat, department store... I remember a list of 60 words we had to remember within a couple of weeks. Not only to remember how they are spelled, but also to know how they are pronounced. Vocabularies play very important part in learning any language. I suggest you keep a notebook where you'd jot down new words you learn. The more the better. Take note that you would encounter words that may confuse you. There are those that sound the same but spelled and mean differently like 달 and 딸. Experts know how they sound differently but for a beginner like me, they sound the same, 'Dal'. Former means moon and latter means daughter. You will see more of these confusing things but keep calm and carry on ;) The first sets of words that we learned were nouns like places, things, people (words for friend, father, mother, etc) After that, we moved on learning Action verbs and Descriptive verbs. Yes, you must know the difference between those two. We needed to remember sets of verbs from those two categories. Since we already know nouns, we easily constructed basic phrases using verbs to describe those nouns. I'm in no way fluent in Korean and I definitely have a long way to go. The way I learn may not be entirely suitable to your style. But one thing I'd would suggest is getting a systematic and organized way of learning the language. Only then I believe you'll be on track. :) Hope that helps!!
2 de julho de 2012
this is a good site for beginners: talktomeninkorean.com
2 de julho de 2012
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