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The way of saying for some basic words:
Yes. ( polite )
네
Nae
Yes. ( casual )
응
Eng
No. ( polite )
아니요.
Aniyo.
No. ( casual )
아니.
Ani
I'm okay. ( polite )
괜찮아요.
Gaenchanayo.
I'm okay. ( casual )
괜차나.
Geanchana.
I'm sorry. ( most polite )
죄송합니다.
Juisonghabnida.
I'm sorry. ( polite )
죄송해요.
Joisonghaeyo.
I'm sorry. ( casual )
미안해.
Mianhae.
🇰🇷 채널 | 채팅 | 단어 배우기 📚
Yes. ( polite )
네
Nae
Yes. ( casual )
응
Eng
No. ( polite )
아니요.
Aniyo.
No. ( casual )
아니.
Ani
I'm okay. ( polite )
괜찮아요.
Gaenchanayo.
I'm okay. ( casual )
괜차나.
Geanchana.
I'm sorry. ( most polite )
죄송합니다.
Juisonghabnida.
I'm sorry. ( polite )
죄송해요.
Joisonghaeyo.
I'm sorry. ( casual )
미안해.
Mianhae.
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Weekdays in Korean :
The word 일 (il) means “day” in Korean. Similarly, 요일 (yoil) also translates as “day”, specifically when used to denote the days of the week.
Monday 월요일 wollyoil
Tuesday 화요일 hwayoil
Wednesday 수요일 suyoil
Thursday 목요일 mogyoil
Friday 금요일 geumyoil
Saturday 토요일 toyoil
Sunday 일요일 illyoil
🇰🇷 채널 | 채팅 | 단어 배우기 📚
The word 일 (il) means “day” in Korean. Similarly, 요일 (yoil) also translates as “day”, specifically when used to denote the days of the week.
Monday 월요일 wollyoil
Tuesday 화요일 hwayoil
Wednesday 수요일 suyoil
Thursday 목요일 mogyoil
Friday 금요일 geumyoil
Saturday 토요일 toyoil
Sunday 일요일 illyoil
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Forwarded from AI Post — Artificial Intelligence
Here are the 10 prompts you can use:
1. Outcome-First Language Plan
“My goal is to use this language confidently for [travel/work/daily conversations]. Create a 30-day learning plan focused on speaking, listening, and understanding real conversations. Avoid streaks, games, or textbook-style lessons. Prioritize practical use only.”
2. High-Frequency Core Vocabulary
“Teach me the most commonly used words and phrases in this language for [specific context]. Include pronunciation guidance, how natives shorten or alter them in speech, and one natural, real-life example for each.”
3. Natural Sentence Formation
“Help me build simple, natural sentences that people actually use in daily life. Start with short structures and gradually expand them. Explain the word order and meaning in clear, non-technical language.”
4. Real-World Conversation Practice
“Role-play a realistic conversation for [situation]. Speak naturally, pause after each message so I can respond, and correct my mistakes gently while explaining what sounds unnatural.”
5. Casual vs Formal Language Use
“Show how the same idea is expressed casually, neutrally, and formally in this language. Explain when and why a native speaker would choose each version in real life.”
6. Common Beginner Mistakes
“List the most common mistakes learners make in everyday conversations in this language. Show incorrect examples, corrected versions, and explain why the mistake happens.”
7. Thinking in the Language
“Help me stop translating from English. Explain how a native speaker would naturally think and structure this idea in the language instead.”
8. Pronunciation Without Audio
“Explain how to pronounce these words using mouth position, rhythm, stress, and pacing, as if teaching someone without access to audio.”
9. Everyday Phrases Natives Actually Use
“Teach everyday phrases natives use in real conversations for [context]. Include informal shortcuts, filler words, and variations people say in fast speech.”
10. Grammar Without Jargon
“Explain this grammar concept using plain language only. Avoid technical terms and focus on how people actually use it when speaking.”
@aipost
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Using This / That with 이다
이다 means “to be” and works like am / is / are in English.
Now that you know how to use 이, 그, 저 (and 이것, 그것, 저것), you can form simple “X is Y” sentences.
Basic Sentence Structure
English:
That person is a doctor.
Korean word order:
That person + doctor + is
Korean sentence:
그 사람은 의사이다
In everyday speech, 이다 is often shortened:
• 그 사람은 의사야 (casual)
• 그 사람은 의사예요 (polite)
More Examples
• 그 사람은 선생님이다 — That person is a teacher
(그 사람은 선생님이야 / 그 사람은 선생님이에요)
• 이것은 탁자이다 — This is a table
(이것은 탁자야 / 이것은 탁자예요)
• 저것은 침대이다 — That is a bed
(저것은 침대야 / 저것은 침대예요)
• 그 사람은 남자이다 — That person is a man
(그 사람은 남자야 / 그 사람은 남자예요)
• 그 사람은 여자이다 — That person is a woman
(그 사람은 여자야 / 그 사람은 여자예요)
• 그것은 차이다 — That is a car
(그것은 차야 / 그것은 차예요)
• 이것은 나무이다 — This is a tree
(이것은 나무야 / 이것은 나무예요)
🇰🇷 채널 | 채팅 | 단어 배우기 📚
이다 means “to be” and works like am / is / are in English.
Now that you know how to use 이, 그, 저 (and 이것, 그것, 저것), you can form simple “X is Y” sentences.
Basic Sentence Structure
English:
That person is a doctor.
Korean word order:
That person + doctor + is
Korean sentence:
그 사람은 의사이다
In everyday speech, 이다 is often shortened:
• 그 사람은 의사야 (casual)
• 그 사람은 의사예요 (polite)
More Examples
• 그 사람은 선생님이다 — That person is a teacher
(그 사람은 선생님이야 / 그 사람은 선생님이에요)
• 이것은 탁자이다 — This is a table
(이것은 탁자야 / 이것은 탁자예요)
• 저것은 침대이다 — That is a bed
(저것은 침대야 / 저것은 침대예요)
• 그 사람은 남자이다 — That person is a man
(그 사람은 남자야 / 그 사람은 남자예요)
• 그 사람은 여자이다 — That person is a woman
(그 사람은 여자야 / 그 사람은 여자예요)
• 그것은 차이다 — That is a car
(그것은 차야 / 그것은 차예요)
• 이것은 나무이다 — This is a tree
(이것은 나무야 / 이것은 나무예요)
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🇰🇷 Korean word of the day
사랑 (sa-rang) — love
Here’s how it’s commonly used:
• 사랑해 (sa-rang-hae) — I love you (casual / informal)
• 사랑합니다 (sa-rang-ham-ni-da) — I love you (polite / formal)
• 저는 당신을 사랑합니다 (jeo-neun dang-sin-eul sa-rang-ham-ni-da) — I love you (very formal, emphatic)
A small word, but one of the most important in Korean 💛
🇰🇷 채널 | 채팅 | 단어 배우기 📚
사랑 (sa-rang) — love
Here’s how it’s commonly used:
• 사랑해 (sa-rang-hae) — I love you (casual / informal)
• 사랑합니다 (sa-rang-ham-ni-da) — I love you (polite / formal)
• 저는 당신을 사랑합니다 (jeo-neun dang-sin-eul sa-rang-ham-ni-da) — I love you (very formal, emphatic)
A small word, but one of the most important in Korean 💛
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🇰🇷 “Where are you?” in Korean
🇰🇷 Polite / default (safe to use with almost anyone):
• 어디 계세요? (eo-di gye-se-yo)
• 어디 있십니까? (eo-di iss-im-ni-kka)
👉 These are polite forms and work well regardless of age or status. Just remember: Korean verb endings change depending on who you’re speaking to 🎙️
🇰🇷 Informal (friends, people your age, close relationships):
• 어디야? (eo-di-ya) 🔥
Simple question, lots of nuance — Korean politeness levels really matter here 🇰🇷
🇰🇷 채널 | 채팅 | 단어 배우기 📚
🇰🇷 Polite / default (safe to use with almost anyone):
• 어디 계세요? (eo-di gye-se-yo)
• 어디 있십니까? (eo-di iss-im-ni-kka)
👉 These are polite forms and work well regardless of age or status. Just remember: Korean verb endings change depending on who you’re speaking to 🎙️
🇰🇷 Informal (friends, people your age, close relationships):
• 어디야? (eo-di-ya) 🔥
Simple question, lots of nuance — Korean politeness levels really matter here 🇰🇷
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