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Korean Language Lab


Korean Grammar: -는데 vs -는 데 | Soona Study Lab
The Power of a Single Space: -는데 vs -는 데 One of the most notorious hurdles for intermediate Korean learners and even native Koreans is mastering the difference between -는데 and -는 데 . When you listen to a Korean conversation, they sound exactly the same. However, when writing, a single space changes the entire meaning and grammatical function of the sentence. -는데 (No space): A magical clause connector used to provide background information, contrast ("but"), or set the scene
3 days ago


Korean Grammar: -(으)ㄹ 거예요 vs -(으)ㄹ게요 Explained | Korean Soona
The Future Tense vs. The Promise: -(으)ㄹ 거예요 vs -(으)ㄹ게요 When you look up "I will" in a Korean dictionary, you will likely find two grammar patterns: -(으)ㄹ 거예요 and -(으)ㄹ게요 . Because they translate to the exact same English phrase, Korean learners frequently mix them up. However, to a native Korean speaker, these two patterns have completely different vibes! Imagine you are leaving the office. You could say "내일 올 거예요" or "내일 올게요." One sounds like a simple, factual plan. The oth
4 days ago


Korean Grammar: How to use -는지 / -(으)ㄴ지 | Learn Korean Online
The Grammar of Uncertainty: -(으)ㄴ/는지 Have you ever wanted to ask someone, "Do you know where the station is?" or say, "I don't know whether it will rain tomorrow"? In English, we use words like 'if', 'whether', or question words (who, what, where) to connect these clauses. In Korean, we use the grammar pattern: -(으)ㄴ/는지 . This pattern is essential for daily conversation, but it can be a bit tricky because its shape changes depending on whether you are using an Action Verb,
Mar 24


Mastering Korean 'ㅂ' Irregular Verbs / ㅂ Irregular Verb Change : Weather & Feelings | Korean Learning Materials
The Shape-Shifters: Korean 'ㅂ' Irregular Verbs (ㅂ 불규칙) Are you looking for the best Korean learning materials to master grammar? Welcome to Soona Study Lab's Grammar Masterclass! Today, we are tackling one of the most frequently used yet confusing grammar points for Korean learners: The 'ㅂ' Irregular Verbs (ㅂ 불규칙 동사). In Korean, if you want to talk about the weather (cold, hot), your feelings, or the taste of food (spicy, bland), you have to use verbs and adjectives that end
Mar 18
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