#grammar
Browse Korean learning posts tagged "Grammar". Slang, grammar, culture, and real-world examples to sharpen your Korean.
6 posts
What Are Korean Particles? A Beginner's Map of μ‘°μ¬ (Josa)
Korean particles, called μ‘°μ¬ (josa), are short grammar markers attached to nouns to show their role in the sentence. This guide maps the main categories, gives you plain-English labels for each, and shows how a single sentence changes meaning as you swap them.

Korean Particles Examples: The 8 You'll Hear Every Day
Korean particles are the tiny glue-words that tell you which noun is the subject, which is the object, where something happened, who it belongs to. Get them wrong and your sentence goes nowhere. Here are the eight particles that cover nearly every beginner sentence, with example lines you'll actually say.

Korean Honorifics Explained: Speech Levels, Suffixes, and Titles
Korean honorifics are less a grammar rule and more a social reflex. You're reading the room β who's older, who's your boss, who's a stranger β and adjusting your verbs. Here's the practical version, starting with one sentence that shows every layer at once.

How Do Korean Honorifics Work? The Two Questions That Decide Everything
Korean honorifics feel like a maze until you realize they hinge on two questions you ask before every sentence. Once those answers click, the verb endings and the vocabulary swaps line up on their own. Here's the shortcut, plus the story of the dinner where I figured this out.

Does Korean Have Particles? Yes β Here's Why They Matter
Yes β Korean particles are tiny suffixes that tell you who's doing what in a sentence. They replace the job word order does in English, which is why Korean can shuffle nouns around and still make sense. Here's how they actually work.

Does Korea Use Honorifics? Yes β Far More Than English Does
Yes β Korea runs on honorifics, way more than English does. They're baked into verbs, titles, and even which word you pick for "eat" or "sleep." Here's where they show up day to day, and what happens when you skip them (spoiler, I've done it).
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