Wow!! I hope I can explain Korean language the way you do!! I'd love to learn, too. I am a student introducing Korean culture and there is always confusion how to explain properly. Thank you for making these. 👍
Your youtube channel is the the best when it comes to learning korean and explaining how the language works! Thank you! Also, I watched some of your inspirational videos and I really those too!
I really loved the k variety shows examples.... Plus i love it when i read books and remember the grammar rules taught by Miss Vicky.. I am forever grateful to you.. You are one of the best teachers I've encountered and i am enjoying my self studies 화이팅
I find your videos really visual and useful. I especially liked to quiz to test our learning at the end - could you keep doing these at the end of your new videos?
Honestly when I started learning Hangul I lost hope of ever being to speak Korean but you really helped me. I am loving your vids and I write everything you write on the vids and I watch your vids till like 5 am in the morning😅😅😅😅😅😬😬😬
This is interesting because the way we ask questions in Brazilian Portuguese is the same as Korean. We just need to raise the tone in the end of the sentence :)
for (-지?), i think it is similar to english's positive-negative question, i forgot what it's called. for example, when we say, "learning korean is fun, isn't it?" "you know that, don't you?" the answer we look for is affirmation to our proposed statement. but i'm not sureee, this is just my thoughts. if someone could confirm, that'd be really nice! ^^
hi you said that 가요 is placed after present adjective so do we need to conjugate that adjective first and then add the question ending or direct add it to the base form of it? in example of 잘하다 you add 나요 to it and translate it to "did you do well?" isn't this present tense i mean "잘하나요?" and here why we didnot say "잘해나효?" i mean conjugate it first to present tense then add 나요 and for past tense it should be " 잘했나요?"
Hi Vicky, can I ask you what book/text you are using there? Would you recommend such book? I am doing all your lessons and I would also like to buy a text book later on to farther improve my Korean. I trust your judgment so If you could recommend one or two it would be great. Thank you so much!
I have a question, 선생님. You have said that if you are using a fixed expression, the object marker will be 가/이. So, I thought that if you are going to ask someone if they can speak korean, then you may ask him/her "한국어가 할 수 있어요?. Is it okay to say it this way? Or is it weird? What is more okay, the 를/을 or the 가/이 object marker?
가/이 can not be used for objects. 은/는 can be. So 한국어가 할수 있어요 sounds very weird. It means "Can korean language do?". But you can say 한국어는 할수 있어요? which means "(you just said you can not speak japanese) but can you speak korean though?
반말 if you're super close (like friends from school or your family), and otherwise, "-요" ending 존댓말 is used the most often. For Korean learners as a second language, it's best to get used to '-요' ending 존댓말
반말 is the informal form of speech and 존댓말 the formal form. But you probably won't get the exact feel by these terms. I explain about the difference in this video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-iYsq-Vij48Q.html hopefully this helps you get it
I'm afraid for the time being that wouldn't be possible unless I find someone kind who will translate all the videos in arabic for me 😢 but thank you for your interest in learning Korean!
In most korean sentence, the subject can be omitted because you can guess it. But in your example, the subject is important. So say like this : 나 배고파. 너도 배고파?
Due to community quarantine I have spare time to study Korean language. Thank you for this video. Keep NM posting. God bless and be safe always. #philippines
Hey Vicky. Learning new things every time you post a video . I am a beginner in learning Korean .And you are making it easy for me . 대단히 감사합니다🙏😇 And now BTS has also come up with LEARN KOREAN WITH BTS on weverse . So it's even more help . But the difference is in your videos I learn in a serious way and in BTS' videos we have a playful session .#인도 아미🇮🇳+🇰🇷 ****Serious doesn't mean boring but means more proper and more like institutional **** 🤗😍 안녕 언니👩🏻
Anyone who is thinking it's too hard to learn or there is so much information,how do I remember all this? 1. Watch the video + take notes 2. Revise the notes 3. After a week: re-watch the video while refering to your notes. Add what you missed in notes. 4. Practice with questions. Repeat the steps 2,3 and 4 with breaks in between. You'll soon remember most of the things. P.S. I have watched the lyric videos so many times that I can tell what miss Vicky is gonna say next :p
Hi Vicky! I've subscribed to your channel and you know what, these days I've been practicing English with your channel!☺ I am so proud of you as the same Korean:) I am always rooting for you💙
They don't really have much difference in meaning. You can choose whichever one you'd like, but for verbs, ㄹ/을까 is the most commonly used one, and for adjectives, -가 is used more often.
Hey Miss Vicky ❤ I'm so glad that you are the best teacher & my favorite teacher to learn Korean. You have helped me in more ways than simply enriching my basic knowledge about korean language. You have also helped shaped me into the person I am today and for that I will always be thankful! This chapter is very interesting while you show us words with its related videos specially BTS💜 감사합니다! Ma'am ❤❤❤❤ Lots of love from India🇮🇳 ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤🙏🙏🙏🙏
This has been more informative than ever. Thank you so much, will be subscribing to see more reliable content. And you are such a great teacher 👍🏼please keep it up 👏🏼👏🏼
빅키샘, I have a question. In what context would the “-니?”,”-나요/가요?” ending/form be used? I understand how to make sentences using that ending, but not when to use them. Also, as a person who has recently discovered you, I want to send my infinite gratitude to you for doing these lessons. I tried to self-tech myself Korean; I spent more time not knowing what I was doing than actually leaning something. But with you, wow, I get everything in one go. A true vocational teacher. *insert applause* 감사합니다 선생님~
점심 먹니? : 반말 : to your son or friends, for example. If you say this to someone whom you just met, it would be very rude. 점심 먹나요? : normal honorific form : 존댓말 : In most cases, you should say like this. But don't say this to your teacher or your boss, for example. 점심 드시나요? : very polite honorific form : 극존댓말 : You should say like this to your teacher or boss.
I've learned a lot from your video. I know how to read and write hangul but my only problem is that i don't know how to construct word. So, your video is such a big help. Thank you so much💜
I think you should use colourful marker so that some of beginner student can easily remember those words. So far in this video, I'm glad that I found this videos of yours because I'm still a beginner since 2013. I hope that I can gaining more and more knowledge about Korean language with your help! 감사합니다, 선생님 ❤.
I just gotta say...you really have your lesson plans down n u teach in the most understanding way possible...keep it up ms. vicky..your a really bright teacher
I really love the Korean culture (I love the food the most lol) and now that I have the time I've started to learn Korean. Your videos help a lot and now I can understand a lot better and I can also have conversations in Korean. thanks a lot 💜🖤
Hello Ms. Vicky! Thank you so much for your classes! I feel like my Korean is really improving! You are amazing! I have a quick question regarding question type #4: Can we add 요 at the end of 을/ㄹ 까 or -가/나 to make it 존댓말? If so how do we tell question type 4 from 3 («I wonder» questions in 존댓말 form)? Depending on the context? Then can we omit 요 in -가/나요 question type 3 to make it 반말? so it would mean the same as -니 ending? I hope I didn’t confuse you with my wording :D because I got confused by only typing this comment lol Thank you so much for your time and dedication!
지금도 꽤 잘 하는데요!? 계속 다듬어 나가면 될 것 같아요 ㅎㅎ 아 참, The Philippines 는 피리핀이 아니라 필리핀이에요 ^^ 계속 화이팅! (Your Korean is already quite good! You can constantly correct your mistakes as you learn on. Just one thing, the Philippines is spelled 필리핀. ^^ Hope you keep up 화이팅!)
thank you so so much! i've always wondered what the difference between all of these endings is, and i realized i've been using some of them sort of interchangeably/ wrong lol Thanks so much for the lesson :D
I love your lessons, so thank you very much. Even though this is 3 yrs old, i'm relatively new to learning Korean. I get how to conjugate as shown, but why would ,or in what circumstances would one use these various endings (other than formal vs casual)? Does ㄴ가요, 니, 나요 have specifics of when/how/why to use them? Maybe i missed that part. Thank you.
for my fellow Filipino, I hope this would be a little help, in tagalog we say "kumain na kaya sya." "Ano kaya ginagawa niya.", diba we do not seek for an answer when we say that? I think that's the equivalent of this ending 13:53 hehe