Dialogue

Vocabulary

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Lesson Transcript

INTRODUCTION
Seol: 안녕하세요 윤설입니다.
Keith: Hi, everybody. This is Keith. Self-Introduction. This is KoreanClass101.com. And this is our very first lesson ever. Aren’t you excited?
Seol: I’m excited.
Keith: Yeah, me too. Me too. I’m really excited about this. So, today, we’d like to thank you for coming by and welcome you to the site. So Seol, can you please give us that in Korean?
Seol: 만나서 반갑습니다.
Keith: What does that mean exactly?
Seol: It’s, “happy to meet you.”
Keith: Happy to meet you. Yes, so we are welcoming you, welcoming you to our wonderful site and our wonderful lessons. And I hope all of you will really enjoy this. All right. A lot of you may not know me. I’m from SurvivalPhrases.com and I teach the Survival Korean Classes. And with me, I have Seol, which many of you probably don’t know either, but why don’t we introduce ourselves, huh?
Seol: Why don’t we do it in Korean?
Keith: Brilliant idea. Why don’t we just make it our first lesson? First lesson, first conversation. Here we go!

Lesson conversation

Keith: 안녕하세요? 저는 Keith입니다. 처음 뵙겠습니다.
Seol: 안녕하세요? 저는 윤설입니다. 처음 뵙겠습니다.
English Host: All right, all right. Why don’t we do that one more time, but this time, a little slower.
Keith: 안녕하세요? 저는 Keith입니다. 처음 뵙겠습니다.
Seol: 안녕하세요? 저는 윤설입니다. 처음 뵙겠습니다.
English Host: And this time, why don’t we do it normal speed, but with some English.
Keith: 안녕하세요 “hello”. 저는 키스입니다. I’m Keith. 처음 뵙겠습니다. It’s nice to meet you.
Seol: 안녕하세요.
Keith: Hello.
Seol: 저는 윤설입니다.
Keith: I’m Yun Seol.
Seol: 처음 뵙겠습니다.
Keith: It’s nice to meet you.
POST CONVERSATION BANTER
All right. So that was our first lesson. Seol, what did you think about it?
Seol: This is really formal, but this is, yeah, very useful I think.
Keith: Very useful? Okay. Do you think it’s very common?
Seol: Yes.
Keith: All right. Well, what did you think about the 저는 키스입니다? I personally felt a little strange because it was Korean and then you kind of got the English name in there and then it’s all mixed up and I don’t know.
Seol: That’s true. It’s really hard to pronounce your name.
Keith: Yeah. Is it really?
Seol: It is. It is.
Keith: Yeah? Okay. I guess a lot of people learning this will have to try to Koreanize their names, maybe?
Seol: Sure. They have to because Korean people have problem pronouncing your, you know, English names. So they have to change. Koreanize.
Keith: So what about me then? What’s...
Seol: Well, we don’t have TH sound. So...
Keith: Okay.
Seol: Well, your name would sound like 키스, like “kiss”, you know.
Keith: Whenever I meet Korean people, they’re always like “Kiss, kiss.” And I just feel...
Seol: Maybe they want to kiss you.
Keith: I have no problems with that if, you know, beautiful ladies and, or maybe not. Yeah, I just really don’t like hearing “kiss”. So what do you think I should do?
Seol: You should sound “Keith” as your name is “Keith”, but Korean people will Koreanize it anyway, so you don’t have to worry about it.
Keith: But I am worried. I don’t want them to Koreanize it, but okay. Do you think they should Koreanize it? Foreigners should Koreanize their names.
Seol: No, I don’t think foreigners have to Koreanize their name.
Keith: So what should they do if they have a name that’s difficult to pronounce?
Seol: Korean people will Koreanize the foreigner’s name so you don’t have to worry.
Keith: Okay, okay. All right. So let’s jump into the review.
VOCAB LIST
Seol: 안녕하세요. [natural native speed]
Keith: Hello. Okay, so can you give it to us once again?
Seol: 안녕하세요. [slowly - broken down by syllable]. 안녕하세요. [natural native speed]
Keith: So, this basically means, “hello”, right?
Seol: That’s right.
Keith: You can use it pretty much, you know, in the morning, in the day, at night, any time you want to say “hello”, “hi”, right? All right. So, 안녕하세요.
Seol: 안녕하세요.
Keith: 안녕하세요.
Seol: 안녕하세요.
Keith: 안녕하세요. Okay. Next. Let’s go with the next one.
Seol: 저 [natural native speed]
Keith: Pronoun, “I” or “me”.
Seol: 저 [natural native speed]
Keith: All right, can you give it to us, one more time, slowly?
Seol 저 [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Keith: 저 [natural native speed]. So one more time. What’s another pronoun that we use for “I”?
Seol: 나
Keith: 나. yes, and this is used pretty much in the same way as...
Seol: 저.
KEY VOCABULARY AND PHRASES
Keith: 저, right? The only difference here is it’s a humbling way of saying “I”. 저 is a humbling way. 나 is more casual.
Seol: That’s right.
Keith: Okay. So, 저 would be used when you’re meeting strangers, when you’re meeting someone of higher social ranking. Today’s lesson, we’re meeting each other for the first time or we’re supposed to be in this conversation, I guess. Yes, right? So we’re using 저 to be as polite as possible. What follows 저?
Seol: 는.
Keith: And 는 is a topic marking particle. We’ll get into more detail as the lessons go on. But, for now, let’s just kind of keep it together with 저. So together with 저 it would be...
Seol: 저는
Keith: Yes 저는.so what’s after that?
Seol: 윤설입니다.
Keith: 윤설입니다. All right. Can you break this down for us? What’s the first part?
Seol: 윤설
Keith: 윤설 now, what is this?
Seol: It’s my name.
Keith: Can you pronounce it for us, one more time? It might be a little difficult for some people pronounce.
Seol: Yun is my family name, and Seol is my first name. So Yun Seol.
Keith: Yun Seol. So the family name comes first before your given name, right?
Seol: That’s right.
Keith: And Yun Seol, your name is a little...
Seol: Strange.
Keith: No, well, not strange. It’s not typical. It’s not common.
Seol: Yeah, that’s not typical.
Keith: Can you explain to us what’s a common Korean name?
Seol: Usually, Korean people have three syllable name.
Keith: Okay.
Seol: Like, 김지영 or 박지훈.
Keith: Okay.
Seol: But I have just two syllable name like 윤설.
Keith: Yun Seol and Yun being your last name and Seol...
Seol: Is my first name.
Keith: Your first name. So, most Korean people, their first names are two syllables?
Seol: Yes.
Keith: And then, the family name. Most people are one syllable, right?
Seol: That’s true.
Keith: Okay. You know, I know some people, they have two syllable last names. Is that very common?
Seol: Not really. I would say it’s really uncommon.
Keith: Really uncommon. Okay. Well, how common is having a one syllable first name?
Seol: Well, 1 out of 10.
Keith: Wow, really? That many?
Seol: Well, 1 out of 20? I’m not sure.
Keith: Just changing the numbers. Okay. So, yes, all right. So that’s Yun Seol. Seol, what follows after that?
Seol: 입니다.

Lesson focus

Keith: 입니다. This is the focus of our lesson today. This, one more time. What is it?
Seol: 입니다.
Keith: This is the coppola the Korean coppola and this is roughly equivalent to the English verb “to be”. Now, what’s the last part of our phrase today, our introduction?
Seol: 처음 뵙겠습니다.
Keith: And this, this means, well what does this mean exactly?
Seol: It’s my first time to meet you.
Keith: “My first time to meet you.” It doesn’t really make a lot of sense in English, right? In English, we say, “how do you do?” Or “nice to meet you”. But a lot of times, you don’t even really mean it, you know. You just, “Nice to meet you?”, “How do you do?” and you don’t even expect a response. 처음 뵙겠습니다, same thing?
Seol: Yeah. It’s exactly the same. So when you say 처음 뵙겠습니다.to other people, then they would say, 처음 뵙겠습니다 again, or they would say, 만나서 뵙겠습니다.
Keith: Okay, okay. That’s great, Seol. That’s great. But, I think this might be a little too much.
Seol: Sure.
Keith: Okay. So maybe next time. Next lesson. So, to get to today’s main point, let’s go over the lines again, okay? So one more time. 안녕하세요? 저는 Keith입니다. 처음 뵙겠습니다.
Seol: 안녕하세요? 저는 윤설입니다. 처음 뵙겠습니다.
Keith: Okay. Yes. Notice how the only thing that changes between the two of our lines is Keith and...
Seol: Yun Seol.
Keith: Because I am Keith and she is Yun Seol, right? You can take out Keith, you can take out Yun Seol, you can put your name in. Okay, let’s do Brad Pitt. I want to be Brad Pitt. So...
Seol: Then I want to be Angelina Jolie.
Keith: Oh, all right. Perfect. Okay. 저는 브래드피트입니다.
Seol: 저는 안젤리나 졸리입니다.
Keith: All right. How about, who else can I do? So, here, 저는 something, something, 입니다 right? And what this translates to is, “I am something, something.” Seol, all right. So 저는 something, something 입니다. What are you? What are you?
Seol: 저는 학생입니다.
Keith: This means, “I am a student.” Can you give us the word for student again?
Seol: 학생. / 학-생
Keith: I’m meeting you for the first time. We’re on a blind date, okay and you don’t know me and I don’t know you. So why don’t you introduce yourself and what are you? I want to know everything about you.
Seol: 저는 윤설입니다. 저는 학생입니다.
Keith: “I am Yun Seol” and “I am a student.” Well, yeah, that’s a translation of course. Myself, I’m Brad Pitt, I’m a movie star.
Seol: Yeah.
Keith: You guys can’t see the look on her face, but yeah, she’s just, yeah.

Outro

Keith: Okay. All right. That’s going to do it for today. See you later, which in Korean is...
Seol: 안녕!
Keith: 안녕!

Grammar

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