Korean Honorific Nouns: 성함, 진지, 댁 and More korean grammar Jun 27, 2026

You've probably learned that Korean has an honorific system - that verbs change, particles change, and speech levels shift depending on who you're talking to.

But here's something many beginners don'...

Continue Reading...
에게 vs 께: How to Say "To" a Person in Korean korean grammar Jun 25, 2026

You've learned for direction - going to a place. But what about giving something to a person, or talking to someone?

Korean uses a completely different particle for that: 에게.

And when that person ...

Continue Reading...
정도 and 쯤: How to Say "About" and "Around" in Korean korean grammar Jun 23, 2026

In real conversation, you rarely know exact numbers. You're not sure if it takes exactly 30 minutes or exactly 10 people - it's about 30 minutes, around 10 people.

Korean has two words that handle th...

Continue Reading...
Korean Irregular Verbs: ㅡ, ㅂ, and 르 Irregulars Explained korean grammar Jun 21, 2026

You've learned the rules for conjugating Korean verbs. Remove 다, check the last vowel, add 아요 or 어요.

It works - until you hit verbs like these:

쓰다 → ✅ 써요 (not 쓰어요) 덥다 → ✅ 더워요 (not 덥아요) 모르다 → ✅ 몰라요

...
Continue Reading...
도: How to Say "Also" and "Too" in Korean korean grammar Jun 18, 2026

One of the most satisfying moments in learning Korean is when a single particle unlocks a dozen new sentences at once.

is that kind of particle.

It means "also," "too," or "even" - and it works ac...

Continue Reading...
Korean Formal Speech: How to Use -습니다 and -ㅂ니다 korean grammar Jun 16, 2026

You've learned -아요/어요 - the polite, everyday way to conjugate Korean verbs.

But Korean has another level above that: formal polite speech, used in presentations, news broadcasts, job interviews, and ...

Continue Reading...
입니다 / 입니까: How to Say "Is / Am / Are" Formally in Korean korean grammar Jun 14, 2026

You already know 이에요/예요 - the polite way to say "is/am/are" in Korean.

But spend any time watching Korean news, sitting in a formal meeting, or listening to official announcements, and you'll hear so...

Continue Reading...
How to Make Negative Sentences in Korean: 안 vs ~지 않아요 korean grammar Jun 07, 2026

One of the most useful things you can learn in any language is how to say no - or more precisely, how to say something is not the case.

In Korean, there are two main ways to make a sentence negative:...

Continue Reading...
How to Make Past Tense in Korean: ~았/었어요 Explained korean grammar Jun 05, 2026

You've learned how to talk about the present in Korean. Now it's time to talk about the past.

"I ate Korean food." "I went to Seoul." "It was delicious."

In Korean, there's one core pattern that han...

Continue Reading...
How to Talk About the Future in Korean: ~(으)ㄹ 거예요 Explained korean grammar Jun 05, 2026

You've learned how to talk about the present and the past in Korean. Now it's time to look ahead.

"I'm going to study Korean." "It will be cold tomorrow." "I'm planning to visit Seoul."

In Korean, o...

Continue Reading...
Korean Numbers: Sino-Korean vs. Native Korean (And When to Use Each) korean grammar Jun 03, 2026

Here's something that surprises almost every Korean beginner:

Korean has two completely separate number systems.

Not just different words for the same numbers - two entirely different sets, used in ...

Continue Reading...
에 vs 에서: How to Say "Where" in Korean korean grammar Jun 01, 2026

You've learned a few Korean sentences and things are going well. Then you hit this:

"I study at the library." "I go to the library."

In Korean, "at the library" and "to the library" use different pa...

Continue Reading...
1 2
DO NOT MISS IT

Looking for consistent tips and motivation on your Korean learning journey?

Life's too short to send spam, and I'm too tired for it anyway. I'll only send you the news you actually need.

You're safe with me. I'll never spam you or sell your contact info.