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Korean TOPIK

Super simple Korean grammar formula

by English-Korean K- Culture, K-pop 2022. 9. 3.
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There are many textbooks called learning Korean as a foreign language, but there are no Korean grammar books from a linguistic point of view, so I made this course.

Based on the English grammar already scientifically verified and used in many countries, I would like to make a new Korean grammar through comparative linguistic analysis of Korean and English.

This is made under the proposition that all grammar is 99.9% identical. It is also based on the result that "Grammar is a rule that makes the order of each word in a sentence."

Therefore, I will explain Korean grammar like the following English grammar.

These are the words that you use to make a sentence.

Namsan Tower, the symbol of Seoul, viewed from the VIP room on the 37th floor of Lotte Hotel

Nouns

Nouns represent people (teacher, Mary), places (town, Asia) and things (table, music).

Adjectives

An adjective is a word that tells us more about a noun (big, red, expensive).

Adverbs

Adverbs tell us more about verbs, adjectives or adverbs (loudly, really, extremely).

To be present: am, is, are

To be past: was, were

To have

To be or to have

Can / can't

Do / does

To do or to be

Be / can / do / have

Auxiliary verbs

Present simple

Past simple

Present continuous

Future: going to / will / ...

Make / do

Conditional

Can / could

Must / have to

Shall / should

Will / would

May / might

Mixed modal verbs

Reported speech

Past participle

Phrasal verbs - mixed

Phrasal verbs - by verb

Passive voice

Past continuous

Present perfect

Past simple vs present perfect

Present perfect continuous

Past perfect

Infinitive / gerund

Confusing verbs

Say / tell

To be used to / get used

Wish / Had better

Mixed verb tenses

Worksheets - lessons

Determiners

Determiners are words like the, an, this that start a noun phrase.

Prepositions

A preposition expresses the relationship of a noun or pronoun to another word (at, in, from).

Pronouns

Pronouns are small words like you, ours, some that can take the place of a noun.

Conjunctions

Conjunctions join two parts of a sentence (and, but, though).

Interjections

Short exclamations with no real grammatical value (ah, dear, er)

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