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How to say hello my name is in korean. I am very new to the language, and I watched a video on how to say my name is, it said, annyeonghaseyo (blank)-ya bangawo or you could say it in a similar way but in formal form. Now I saw someone say jeoneun (blank) to introduce themselves, though I thought you said jeoneun as a way to say I in places ...
한국말 배워요. Literally, this translates to "learn Korean." But it expresses what you're trying to say more accurately than trying to literally construct "I am learning Korean" (which is grammatically impossible) or even using the Korean equivalent of the present progressive tense (which has the nuance of meaning you're actively doing it ...
Hello: 안녕하세요 (this is a pretty "set" phrase, it is shortened among close friends to 안녕 which would not be suitable even in an informal situation with a stranger) Thank you: 고마워요 formal/polite but not to the level of business formal. Have a good/nice day is actually not something Koreans would typically say.
There's no master key to say hi naturally in Korean in every situation. Just like anything about Korean, it always depends on the things like vibe, streamers-viewers relationship, situation, etc. For example, if the streamer is a middle-aged man, most people would go politely, like 안녕하세요, 하이요, ㅎㅇ요.
For me, that means polite language in Korean, and it means calling me Mr. Lastname in English, no calling me by my first name, and no calling me "teacher". Just make sure you stay calm and respectful to them, too. Because they'll appreciate the respect being reciprocated. 1.
It will make learning korean so much easier, and make typing on the korean keyboard as intuitive as typing on the english/roman keyboard. Hangeul is a very simple letter system, it’s the easiest part of the korean language. I believe most people could learn it in a week or less, given 10 minutes of study time per day.
So today I would like to introduce you ‘3 different ways of “How are you?” in Korean’. Video lesson (with pronunciation and examples) After saying hello, 1. We ask if we had meal. “밥 먹었어?” [bap meok eot eo]= Have you eaten yet? (Casual) “밥은?” [bap eun]= What about meal? (Casual)
So well, I would say not to get stressed about this too much. :) I think Korean people still don't get too see many foreigners who speak Korean, so if you ask them of grammars or etc, many people would be happy to help you if you are already in Korea.
We'd rented a mini bus to take them around Seoul, and every time they got off the bus, one by one, they'd say 감사합니다! to the bus driver. He was quite amused. Everyone should definitely learn to at least say hello and thank you, like you said.
이 is added if their name ends in a consonant. you can also use this with other titles (누나/오빠/etc) but not with formal titles (선생님/etc) 그쪽 = not formal, but an acceptable way to say "you" to people you haven't yet been introduced to or don't know their name. shouldn't be used when the person is much older than you, as it can ...