
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 are small grammar markers you attach to nouns to show their role in a sentence β subject, object, location, topic, and more. This guide walks the eight most common particles with clear example sentences you can repeat out loud.

Korean honorifics are a system of grammar choices that raise or lower the politeness of what you say based on who you're talking to and who you're talking about. This guide explains the three layers β speech levels, honorific suffixes, and kinship titles β in plain English.

Korean honorifics feel intimidating, but they reduce to two questions you ask before every sentence. This guide walks the two-question test, shows the mechanical choices it triggers, and gives you drill sentences to practice.

Yes, Korean has particles, and they are central to how the grammar works. Instead of relying on word order like English, Korean attaches small markers to nouns that show who is doing what. This post explains what they are and why you cannot skip them.

Korea uses honorifics constantly. They are built into verbs, titles, and the choice of words themselves β far deeper than English politeness. This guide explains where and when honorifics show up in daily Korean life, and what happens if you don't use them.