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Learn Korean with KoreanClass101.com! Have you made plans for where you will ring in the New Year in Korea? If not, instead of staying up all night partying, we have a better idea. Perhaps you should try something more meaningful this year, especially since you’re in Korea. If you want to go to a place in Korea that will change your perspective and where you can wish for things to come true, Jeong-dong-jin might be the very place!
In this lesson, you’ll find out about another of our top ten Korean locations: Jeong-dong-jin. Although this Korean place is a train station, it offers visitors so much more, and you’ll find out what we’re talking about today. Visit us at KoreanClass101.com, where you will find Korean lesson notes (remember—this Advanced Audio Blog lesson is spoken entirely in Korean!) and many more fantastic lessons and learning resources! Leave us a message while you are there!
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Learn Korean travel phrases with KoreanClass101.com! A little Korean can go such a long way! Whether you’re traveling, visiting, or sightseeing, KoreanClass101.com has all the essential travel phrases just for you! In this lesson we cover a high frequency Korean phrase that you’ll surely find useful on your trip, travels, or vacation to Korea.
Today, you’ll be learning how to ask for help and call the police. Hopefully, you won’t need to use these phrases during your trip to Korea, but it is essential that you know these Korean Survival Phrases.To learn more about Korean culture and Korean phrases, be sure to stop by KoreanClass101.com before you leave on your holiday to Korea!
Learn Korean with KoreanClass101.com! You are walking through the streets of Seoul, enjoying your time off from school and work, when suddenly, you hear crying and yelling just ahead. As you get closer, you see a Korean storeowner and a teenage boy screaming loudly at each other! The storeowner is very angry and throws his arms around in fury. You look around you for answers from the crowd…no one is helping in any way. Crying, the teenager sits at a nearby bench, moping. But the storeowner follows him and starts pushing him, yelling more loudly! You don’t know what to do…but you feel you should do something. Pulling out your cell phone, you call the Korean police station – they can handle it. The dispatcher on the other end asks you in Korean, “I know you dislike what you hear, but please describe the scene for me so I can tell the police.” You explain in Korean, “There is a teenage boy, crying and moping. I see a very angry storeowner, yelling and complaining. And there is a scared woman running away, clutching her child to protect him.” Within minutes, the police arrive and have the situation under control. Looks like your Korean skills just helped make a very negative situation better. Learning Korean with KoreanClass101.com is the most fun and effective way to learn Korean! This Korean Video Vocabulary lesson will teach you how to talk about negative emotions in Korean. In this Korean vocabulary video, you will learn Korean by watching the video, seeing both English and Korean translations describing the video, and all while listening to the Korean translations being read aloud by our native Korean speakers. Visit us at KoreanClass101.com where you will find many more great Korean lessons and learning materials! Leave us a message while you are there!
Learn Korean with KoreanClass101.com! You are finally in Korea, and while others might be happy with “normal” sightseeing tours, you want to experience EVERYTHING Korea has to offer! On today’s agenda - the zoo in Korea! You can’t wait to see how different the zoo might be from the one back home you have seen since you were two. As you walk through the zoo, you overhear people chatting about the animals in Korean. A lady looking at the monkeys says excitedly in Korean, “Look honey! The monkeys are eating ants with a stick!” You rush over to the monkeys; you have only seen them use tools on TV! How exciting! Moments later, you hear a man telling his son in Korean, “Look at what that baby elephant is doing!” Excited to see something new again (and feeling a little like a kid again), you rush to the elephants where you see the baby throwing dirt all around him. How cute is that? Throughout the day, you witness amazing things from wild animals that you have never seen before! And none of this would be possible if you hadn’t learned Korean. This was definitely a great idea! Good thing you came prepared! Learning Korean with KoreanClass101.com is the most fun and effective way to learn Korean! This Korean Video Vocabulary lesson will teach you the Korean vocabulary to talk about safari animals. Whether it’s to enrich your vacation or to tell the police where the black rhinoceros hit your car, this video lesson is sure to help you tame the wild beast…well, at least the vocabulary for it! In this Korean vocabulary video, you will learn Korean by watching the video, seeing both English and Korean translations describing the video, and all while listening to the Korean translations being read aloud by our native Korean speakers. Visit us at KoreanClass101.com where you will find many more great Korean lessons and learning materials! Leave us a message while you are there!
Learn Korean with KoreanClass101.com! Your friend calls you at the last minute and invites you to the movies in Korea, so you and your Korean roommate dash out the door, hop in your car, and get on the Korean highway. You’re peacefully driving along a few kilometers over the Korean speed limit, but it’s a short drive, so you decide to press your luck. Unfortunately, you speed right past a waiting Korean police officer! Before you know it, the policeman turns onto the highway, pulls into the lane behind you, and turns on his flashing lights. As you pull over to the side of the Korean highway, you practice your speech for the policeman with your passenger, and explain in Korean that the two of you are on your way to visit someone in the hospital. Your roommate advises you in Korean, “You can’t lie to the policeman!” You suppose she is right, so you try to invent a new story about why you broke the Korean speed limit. You suggest to your friend in Korean, “What if we tell him we needed to go pick up our friend from work and it was getting late; therefore, we had to d?” Your roommate responds in Korean, “So what? Why would we need to speed to do that?” Back to the drawing board…
Learning Korean with KoreanClass101.com is the most fun and effective way to learn Korean! This Korean Newbie lesson will teach you how to say the Korean equivalent of “so” and “therefore.” We’ll even tell you how to use it as a question to say “So what?” so you can add a little sarcasm to your Korean repertoire. 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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