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Learn Korean with KoreanClass101.com! Welcome to KoreanClass101.com’s Hana Hana Hangul series. In this video series of twenty lessons, you will learn the Korean alphabet, known as Hangul. We will teach you Hangul using simple steps, showing you the correct stroke order, helpful tricks for memorization, and proper usage in common Korean words. If you want to get started reading and writing Korean, this is THE place to start. You’ll learn Korean in mere minutes with these audio and video lessons, so join us for Hana Hana Hangul from KoreanClass101.com!
In this lesson, we’ll show you how to write the basic Hangul vowels in Korean: ㅇ,ㅏ, andㅣ, and we’ll teach you a few words you can write with these characters. Are you ready to learn more Korean characters and words? Visit us at KoreanClass101.com, where you will find Korean lesson notes and many more fantastic lessons and learning resources! Leave us a message while you are there!
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Learn Korean with KoreanClass101.com! Your stomach has been hurting for hours, and you’re doubled over in pain. In fact, your curled up in bed. Your roommate comes in to check on you and asks you how you’re feeling in Korean. When you tell him in Korean that you cannot move, he suggests that you go to the emergency room for treatment-immediately!
In this lesson, you will learn how to show surprise or disappointment using the pattern noun + 조차 + verb + 없다. Our Korean conversation takes place at work between two managers. Since the speakers are co-workers, they are speaking both formal and informal Korean. We will also tell you why Koreans prefer to go to university rather than private hospitals. 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! Ever since you were little, you’ve been adept at making up excuses in Korean. Did you forget your homework? You’d tell your teacher the dog ate it. Now that you’re a grown-up, why should things be any different? You promise your boss in Korean that you’ll always meet deadlines. Of course, if you finish your work after midnight on the deadline day, it still counts as the day before if the boss is asleep, right?
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to make excuses using the Korean phrase 방금/막 + 참이다. Our Korean conversation takes place at work between a team manager and a director. Since the speakers are co-workers, they’re speaking formal and informal Korean. You’ll also find out why you should overpromise what you can deliver on your Korean job. 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! When your co-worker starts talking to you about bullets in Korean, you smile and nod politely, but you think he must have gone crazy. What in the world does he mean? After he leaves, you try to look up the Korean word for “bullets” in your dictionary, but it doesn’t shed any light for you. Maybe you need to report your co-worker to security, or perhaps there is another explanation?
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to use idiomatic expressions using the Korean word 총 meaning “guns” or “rifles.” Our Korean conversation takes place at a bar between two managers. Since the speakers are co-workers, they’re speaking both formal and informal Korean. You’ll also find out a way to get Korean men to open up and talk to you. 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! For the last twenty minutes, your friend has been lecturing you about the obligations of being a good friend. As he tends to do, you think he’s trying to convince you to pay for something for him, but you’re not sure what. You start planning a diatribe of your own in Korean about what it means to be a financially responsible adult.
In this lesson, you will learn about 로서, which is a Korean construction that refers to qualifications or social position. Today’s conversation takes place at a restaurant between two close friends; therefore, the speakers are using informal Korean, 반말입니다. You’ll be able to use this Korean pattern to establish people’s position in the social hierarchy or their level of authority. 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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