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korstudying · 11 months
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Unraveling the Wonders of the Korean Number System: Counting in Style! 🌟
Today, let's dive into the captivating world of numbers in the Korean language. Get ready to unlock the secrets of the Korean number system and take your counting skills to the next level! 🎲
🕰️ Counting Systems: In Korean, two counting systems exist. The Native Korean system is used for counting items and general counting, while the Sino-Korean system is employed for dates, time, money, and counting large numbers.
#️⃣ The Native Korean numbering system, also known as Korean Native Numbers or Pure Korean Numbers, is a number system used in Korean to express counting and native Korean words. Unlike the Sino-Korean numbering system, which is based on Chinese characters, the Native Korean system uses unique Korean words for counting.
Here are the Native Korean numbers from 1 to 10:
1 - 하나
2 - 둘 
3 - 셋 
4 - 넷 
5 - 다섯 
6 - 여섯 
7 - 일곱 
8 - 여덟 
9 - 아홉 
10 - 열 
For numbers above 10, the Native Korean system uses the word for 10 (열) as a base unit and adds the numbers 1 to 9. For example:
11 - 열하나 
15 - 열다섯
However, each 10th has it’s own name you add 1-9 to:
20 - 스물 
25 - 스물다섯 
30 - 서른 
40 - 마흔
50 - 쉰
60 - 예순
70 - 일흔
80 - 여든
90 - 아흔
Everything above 99 becomes Sino-Korean. Keep reading to find out more!
The Native Korean system is commonly used for counting objects, ages, and some specific situations in daily life. However, it is important to note that the Sino-Korean system is more prevalent in formal contexts, such as telling time, expressing dates, and discussing large numbers.
#️⃣ Sino-Korean System: The Sino-Korean system utilizes Chinese characters and is commonly used for dates, time, money, and counting large numbers. It provides a systematic way of expressing quantities and has a consistent structure.
Key Sino-Korean Counting Words:
10 - 십
100 - 백
1,000 - 천
10,000 - 만
100,000 - 십만
1,000,000 - 백만
10,000,000 - 천만
100,000,000 - 억
1,000,000,000 - 십억
Combining Sino-Korean Numbers: To express larger numbers, you combine the counting words with the appropriate Sino-Korean numbers. For example:
112 - 백십이
1,345 - 천삼백사십오
10,000 - 만
230,000 - 십만 삼천
2,500,000 - 이백오십만
1,000,000,000 - 십억
The Sino-Korean system is widely used in various contexts, such as telling the time (시, 분), expressing money (원), stating dates (년, 월, 일), and specifying large quantities.
🎲 Fun Fact: In Korea, there's a tradition of celebrating "만" days, which marks special milestones like the 10,000th day since birth or a significant event. It's a fun way to commemorate and cherish special moments!
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elletudie · 9 months
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Sad to see the loss of one of the largest free Korean language learning resource with Talk To Me In Korean moving to paid-only platform.
Since starting to learn Korean in 2016, I’ve witnessed huge improvements in the accessibility of free resources for Korean learners. TTMIK has been a huge part of the popularisation of Korean language learning.
My favourite free alternatives to TTMIK for learning Korean:
HowToStudyKorean.com (my all time favourite - I’ve used them since day 1)
King Sejong Institute textbooks (available for free online through 누리 세종학당)
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ecoamerica · 20 days
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Watch the American Climate Leadership Awards 2024 now: https://youtu.be/bWiW4Rp8vF0?feature=shared
The American Climate Leadership Awards 2024 broadcast recording is now available on ecoAmerica's YouTube channel for viewers to be inspired by active climate leaders. Watch to find out which finalist received the $50,000 grand prize! Hosted by Vanessa Hauc and featuring Bill McKibben and Katharine Hayhoe!
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New Talk To Me in Korean book.
It didnt come in the usual yellow envelope.
Came with bookmarks
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monimoonie · 10 months
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first lessons on Korean language. here’s to a productive summer!
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artnamjooning · 4 months
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2023 December 26
Really productive day studying Korean. Haven’t had one of those in a loooong while. Excuse the mess—it was cold and I wanted to study under my electric blanket. 😭
• reviewed previous TTMIK Level 2 lessons (it’s been a long time I’m telling you lol)
• completed TTMIK Level 2 Lessons 7, 8, 9
• Dialogue 2 from Real-Life Korean Conversations for Beginners by TTMIK
• Day 5 + Quiz from Days 1-5 of 10-Minute Korean by TTMIK
• Anki
You can tell I don’t want to grind with my Korean Grammar in Use lol but this was genuinely nice and I’m happy with my work today in a way I haven’t been in a while!
🎧: Closer Than This - Jimin
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lang0331 · 2 years
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quoting questions
verbt stem/ adjective + 냐고
몇 살이냐고 물어봤어
they asked me how old i am
나에게 어디 가냐고 물어봤어
he asked me where i was going
나는 언제 결혼하냐고 물어보는 게 제일 싫었다
i hate it the most when people ask me when i'm getting married
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raveng1rl · 10 months
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i finally got my korean textbooks and workbooks yesterday! yay!
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hsinnii · 8 months
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pls give online resources alternatives to ttmik, im currently using korean from zero and howtostudykorean but i need more i didnt realize my ttmik subscription expired and cant afford to get it back rn
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productivelily102 · 2 years
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hey guys! new video is up!! hope you enjoy!
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mooseblr · 1 year
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TTMIK workbook has made learning korean 1000x more enjoyable again i love structured learning
self-studying languages can be so hard without a curriculum esp when i'm low on motivation. sometimes i just need something to tell me exactly what to do lmao
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mykoreanlibrary · 2 years
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TTMIK My First 500 Korean Words
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Download - HERE -
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ecoamerica · 20 days
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Watch the American Climate Leadership Awards 2024 now: https://youtu.be/bWiW4Rp8vF0?feature=shared
The American Climate Leadership Awards 2024 broadcast recording is now available on ecoAmerica's YouTube channel for viewers to be inspired by active climate leaders. Watch to find out which finalist received the $50,000 grand prize! Hosted by Vanessa Hauc and featuring Bill McKibben and Katharine Hayhoe!
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dosoguan · 2 months
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Esercizi a tutto spiano 🛣️ ▶ per il Coreano 🇰🇷 di livello A1 - A2 ! 🎯*Assimila ⚙️ e Verifica quanto Appreso✍️ ↪ Nello studio della Grammatica del Livello Beginner ✅ ! Esercitati con una Moltitudine di Test 📈 .. ●
->
🔴 Graduated Exercises for the Elementary Level of the Korean Language ▷ View and Use Naturally the Korean Sentence Patterns 📌in Context! 🌟 A Lot Of Study Material 📖 ✍️ for Beginners ✎💬 …
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Late anniversary present for myself.
Gotta love a new TTMIK book.
It like a diary/planner.
Challenge for next month I think
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monimoonie · 9 months
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not loving the southern spain heat this summer season, but still trying to make my days count. 👍🏻
please follow me on my ig account! @ emperorsnewstudies 💜
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plaidcatlady · 7 months
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book reviews for Korean learners #2
혹시 파간색 진돗개 보셨어요? "Have You Seen a Blue Jindo Dog?" by Kanari Jones & TalkToMeInKorean
This was a whole lot of fun and I highly recommend it for intermediate learners. It's a real challenge finding reading material that's a manageable reading level without being boring, and while kids books can seem like a good avenue to try, it can be challenging to find something that's also interesting to adults. This book is really fantastic in that regard - it uses intermediate level grammar without feeling stilted, and it's wacky enough to keep you interested even if children's books aren't necessarily your thing. It's long! Over a hundred pages across eight chapters. So you can break it up into bite sized chunks if you're a slower reader, like me. That makes it feel like it's money well spent, if you're needing to economize. Also, there's a qr code to hear the book read in Korean by a native speaker. I've listened to a few chapters and it's well read, at a pace that wasn't too hard for me to follow (I'm an even slower listener!). It is a bilingual book - Korean and English, but the Hangul is printed larger and bolder than the English, which is nice if you tend to get distracted by English text (I do!). Often the two languages are on facing pages, too, which also helps in that regard.
The story involves robot parrots taking over human minds and a group of animals banding together to save Jin, a lost dog. Wacky shenanigans and some supernatural weirdness ensue. I bought it through the Talk To Me in Korean website - I don't know how that works now that they're a paid service, but I see it's also available at my other go-to for Korean books kbookstore
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kohanasaku · 9 months
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The end of an era! Even worse since I’ve only been here for a couple of months. I actually have a stupid (on my part) story about TTMIK, around six years back, I *thought* about learning Korean and an anon in my Tumblr at that time suggested TTMIK, but I saw 'Pricing’ on their website and thought ‘huh, it’s not free, I’ll think about it,’ then I forgot about the whole learning thing. It’s only when I entered a Discord server for ARMYs learning Korean that I found out their essential courses were free.
If I had just dug through their website and found the (then) free grammar courses, would I have been skilled in Korean by now?
The subscription is pretty steep for someone in the global south, and I also don’t know if I can make the most out of it, since I want to try a CI-focused approach.
Being late to the party is totally my fault though, I really hope everything works out for the best for them, even if I can’t be a subscriber (yet).
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