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In Korean, verbs and adjectives can describe the subject in a sentence. Korean verbs and adjectives are called predicates. Korean adjectives can be used as predicates, while in English, they are not. "크고" is a combination of the stem(어간) "크" of the adjective "크다" and the connecting ending(연결어미) "고." Connecting endings (연결어미) can be attached to the stems of verbs(동사) or adjectives(형용사). The conjunction particle (접속조사) "랑" is a particle(조사) that connects two words on an equal footing, so it cannot be used in this case.
Hello! Would you like to learn Korean? If so, come here. Listen to each word like Morse code and enter it according to the @ symbol. Then, try answering and ask questions right away. If you concentrate, you will be able to speak Korean well. Come here. If it works, please click “Like!, Subscribe”. Please leave a comment too. Thank you. I will do my best to provide better videos until you speak Korean well. Here is the link to the video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-4kYBn1p0bcY.html.
Basically Casual - siblings (people who are very close to you like siblings, friends, etc) Informal - (strangers who are younger than you and who you're not close to) Informal polite - (for elders and people who are at higher level than you) If you're wondering which speech style to first learn, I suggest Jondaetmal speech style as it's appropriate for all occasions and for everyone.
Thanks for the question. All words are written horizontally in the modern Korean writing system; even though vertically written words are understandable. So, we write all words horizontally, such as "고진감래," "동문서답," "동서남북," etc. Please let us know if this answer is not clear to you.
I would find it useful if you could list the three levels of formality for the same or similar expressions next to eachother, so I could see their similarities and differences.