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Archive for July, 2009  

Learn Korean with KoreanClass101.com! Your stomach never thought it would meet its match, until you traveled to Korea and went to your first dinner party. Out came dish after dish of Korean food, including vegetables, rice, seafood, and poultry. You thought the parade of food would never end, so you decide to ask your friend to join you. You tell him in Korean, “there is too much food for me to eat by myself. Will you help me eat it?” Kind friend that he is, he graciously obliges - after all, who doesn’t like a free meal! You pass him a bowl of rice and then the famous Korean dish kimchi. He asks you what it is, and you simply tell him in Korean, “It’s delicious!” As he bites into the spicy cabbage, he screams in Korean, “This is too spicy for me to eat!” You laugh and just pass him the next bowl. Hmm…maybe you should tell him it’s full of chili peppers!

Learning Korean with KoreanClass101.com is the most fun and effective way to learn Korean! This Korean Intermediate lesson will teach you how to say something is “excessive” or “too much” in Korean. So when your friend tells you in Korean that he wants to visit the doctor when you finish your meal, maybe you shouldn’t tell him it’s too far away for you to drive him there! Visit us at KoreanClass101.com where you will find many more fantastic Korean lessons and learning resources! Leave us a message while you are there!

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Learn Korean with KoreanClass101.com! After you left your parents’ home to go to college, they decided to move to a new house in Korea. You expected them to keep your room intact, hauling all your memorabilia and trinkets with them as they flew on Korean Air, didn’t you! But when you arrive in Korea and visit their new home, you are shocked. There is no dedicated shrine to your childhood, and your treasured Korean high school letter jacket is suspiciously absent from the closets. And just where are your posters of Michael Jackson or Britney Spears? They aren’t plastered on any walls! Did they forget about you and your childhood when they moved to Korea? Of course not! They kept the one thing you wish they’d get rid of - that embarrassing picture of you in the eighth grade. You know, the one with the bad haircut and the braces. Maybe you’ll take that one with you when you leave.

Learning Korean with KoreanClass101.com is the most fun and effective way to learn Korean! This Korean Audio Blog lesson will teach you about how to express your observations and sentiments about moving to a new home in Korean, and you’ll learn vocabulary about a home’s furnishings, emotions, and travel, among other things. Visit us at KoreanClass101.com where you will find Korean Lesson notes (remember - this lesson is spoken entirely in Korean!) as well as many more fantastic Korean lessons and learning resources! Leave us a message while you are there!

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Learn Korean with KoreanClass101.com! One of your favorite activities since you moved to Korea has been your weekly hike in the mountains. Today, as you sit admiring the beautiful view below you, you notice the young Korean girl sitting next to you. She must have the same hiking schedule as you because you always see her here…maybe you should talk to her. So you lean over and tell her in Korean, “I see you here often.” Shyly, she replies in Korean, “Oh yes, the weather is beautiful on the mountain.” Nodding your head in agreement, you reply in Korean, “Yes, it’s beautiful. You hike here often.” Looking a little shocked by your noticing her…and a little nervous…she agrees and replies in Korean, “I hike here once a week and see you often. I love the mountain. You come here often, too then.” Shyly, she looks away. There is something strange about this girl…

Learning Korean with KoreanClass101.com is the most fun and effective way to learn Korean! This Korean Beginner lesson will teach you about a Korean sentence ending that will elicit agreement or a reaction of some sort from the person you are speaking to in Korean. Visit us at KoreanClass101 when you will find many more fantastic Korean lessons and learning resources! Leave us a message while you are there!

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Today you and your friends in Korea are spending the entire day outside, relaxing in the warm Korean sun. OUCH! What’s that? A mosquito? Aren’t you glad you brought repellent? But wait…it seems to be chasing you! Running away frantically, you call back to your friends in Korean, “Catch that mosquito!” Laughing at you hysterically running away from a tiny little bug, they yell back in Korean, “We’re not catching it, you catch it! After all, you’re closer!” Very funny! It bites you again! Screaming in agony, you cry back for help in Korean, “Please, spray the repellent!” Your friends are not being helpful at all as they yell back in Korean, “You come back here and spray it yourself!” Finally, you make it back, spray the repellent, and you’re safe! What’s that? Oh, you want me to spray the repellent? Humph!

Learning Korean with KoreanClass101.com is the most fun and effective way to learn Korean! This Korean Newbie lesson will teach you how to form the imperative in Korean using Korean phrases meaning, “catch it” and “spray it!” We’ll tell you why you need to use the imperative and show you how easy it is to form this simple Korean construction! Visit us at KoreanClass101 for more great Korean lessons and learning materials! Leave us a message while you are there!

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Learn Korean with KoreanClass101.com! Here at KoreanClass101.com, we’ve discovered the easiest way for you to learn Korean vocabulary words. Put us to the test with this video tutorial designed to teach you about something that you can’t live without.

In this Korean video tutorial, you’ll learn the words for different jobs. They’re presented so that you’re sure to learn and retain them: hear a native speaker repeat the word three times, fast, slow, then fast. The video also shows the Korean characters for each item, and there’s a fun self-test at the end so you can see just how much you learned.