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The native Korean counting system only goes up to 99, but even those numbers can be tough to say. You’ll use these numbers to tell your age or to count quantities like how many bananas you want to buy at the market, and so on. Just start with the Sino-Korean system lesson and lea...
Now that you know the word for “country” in Korean, the next step is to learn the names of the countries in Korean. This way, you can specify which country you’d like to talk about. Below is a list of some of the countries and their names in Korean. If you’d like to learn ...
Korean Numbers 11-99 The general rule to form a double-digit number isnumber + 십(sip) +number, reading the numeral from left to right: 24 = 이십사 (two-ten-four) 92 = 구십이 (nine-ten-two) For numbers 11-19, it’s just십(sip) + number: ...
Korean: "오" (pronounced "oh") uses Hangul, a phonetic writing system with characters that visually represent sounds. Swahili: "Tano," spoken in East Africa, adds a melodic rhythm to our numerical exploration. Arabic: "خمسة" (pronounced "khamsa") introduces a ...
So it's little bit more complicated than Sino-Korean counting.(Still simpler than English though. They have twelve/thirty/fourty and more...)So, when it comes to Native numbers 21 is not two tens-one. It's more like 'twelve-one'.Hence "둘열하나" is wrong, "스물하나"...
“I am Korean.” To say that you are Korean, simply attach the suffix 사람 (saram) meaning “person” to 한국 (hanguk) meaning “Korea.” The resulting clause, 한국사람 (Hanguksaram) translates literally to “Korea person.” Alternatively, you can say 한국인 (Hanguk...
You’d use them when you want to note how many there are of something. For example, to say things such as “three apples,”“65 students,”“32 absences” and so forth. Other instances in which you’d use native Korean numbers would be with describing age and the hour (but not the...
When I was learning korean, I was learning how to use "은가요"/" 나요"/"을건가요", and I found out that none of them work for "adjective in the future", "을건가요" works for "verb in the future". So, is there no way to form an adjective in the future...