Korean Grammar for Beginners: The Complete Roadmap From Word Order to Your First Conversation | Korean TokTok
Korean Grammar for Beginners: The Complete Roadmap From Word Order to Your First Conversation
Korean grammar for beginners demystified. Ten essential pillars — word order, particles, verb conjugation, past tense, negation, honorifics, connectors, and question words — with examples, mistakes, and a practice path.
Korean grammar looks intimidating for one reason: it is structurally the opposite of English. Subjects come first, verbs come last, and little tags called particles stick to nouns to tell you which noun does what. Once you internalize those two ideas — word order and particles — the rest of korean grammar for beginners is mostly vocabulary plus a handful of rules you will see over and over.
This guide is a roadmap, not a textbook dump. Every section covers one topic, gives three example sentences with full English translations, and flags the most common mistake learners make. By the end, you will be able to read a short Korean sentence, identify every piece of it, and construct your own. You will also know where to go next on koreantoktok.com to practice each concept live.
Two ideas to hold onto before we start:
Korean is Subject–Object–Verb (SOV). English is "I eat rice." Korean is "I rice eat." Stop thinking in English word order the moment you plan a sentence.
Particles tell you a noun's job in the sentence. English uses word order and prepositions; Korean uses tiny suffixes that attach to the end of nouns. Learn the particles and you can understand any sentence regardless of how the words are arranged.
Every complete Korean sentence ends with a verb or an adjective. Put the actor first, the thing acted on second, the action last.
Role
English
Korean
Subject
I
저는 (formal) / 나는 (casual)
Object
rice
밥을
Verb
eat
먹어요
Examples:
저는 밥을 먹어요. — "I eat rice." (literally: I / rice / eat)
친구는 영화를 봐요. — "My friend watches a movie." (friend / movie / watches)
강아지는 공을 좋아해요. — "The puppy likes the ball." (puppy / ball / likes)
Common mistake: English speakers instinctively end sentences with "eat" somewhere in the middle. In Korean, the verb always goes last. If you finish a sentence without a verb, you have not finished.
The single biggest confusion in korean grammar for beginners is why there are two particle sets for subjects. The quick version:
이 / 가 — marks the grammatical subject, especially when the subject is new information or being introduced.
은 / 는 — marks the topic, the thing the sentence is about, often contrasting it with something else.
Pick 이 or 은 if the noun ends in a consonant. Pick 가 or 는 if it ends in a vowel.
Noun ending in…
Subject
Topic
Consonant (책)
이 (책이)
은 (책은)
Vowel (사과)
가 (사과가)
는 (사과는)
Examples:
고양이가 자요. — "A cat is sleeping." (new info — there's a cat, and it is sleeping)
고양이는 자요. — "As for the cat, it's sleeping." (topic — contrast implied, maybe other animals aren't)
저는 학생이에요. — "I am a student." (introducing yourself as the topic)
Common mistake: Using 이/가 when you should use 은/는 in self-introductions. "제가 김민수예요" sounds like you are identifying yourself against other candidates ("I am Kim Minsu"). "저는 김민수예요" is the neutral introduction.
The object particle is simpler. 을 after a consonant, 를 after a vowel. It marks what the verb acts on.
Examples:
저는 커피를 마셔요. — "I drink coffee." (커피 ends in vowel → 를)
친구는 책을 읽어요. — "My friend reads a book." (책 ends in consonant → 을)
저는 영화를 봐요. — "I watch movies."
Common mistake: Dropping the object particle. In very casual speech, Koreans often drop 을/를, but as a beginner you should always include it. Dropping it before you understand when dropping is idiomatic will sound wrong, not casual.
Particles also mark location and time. The four most important:
에 — destination, existence, or a point in time (to, at, in)
에서 — location of an action (at, from)
까지 — up to, until (endpoint)
부터 — starting from (start point)
Examples:
학교에 가요. — "I go to school." (에 = destination)
학교에서 공부해요. — "I study at school." (에서 = where an action happens)
9시부터 5시까지 일해요. — "I work from 9 to 5."
집에 있어요. — "I'm at home." (에 used with 있다 for existence)
Common mistake: Using 에 when you need 에서. Rule of thumb: if there is an action verb (study, eat, meet), use 에서. If it is just "go to," "be at," or "exist at," use 에.
Most Korean sentences a learner encounters end in the 해요 form — the informal polite present tense. It is what you will use in 90% of real conversations.
Conjugation pattern: take the verb stem (the dictionary form minus 다), add 아요 or 어요 based on the last vowel.
Dictionary form
Stem
Vowel
Ending
Final
가다 (to go)
가
ㅏ
아요
가요
먹다 (to eat)
먹
ㅓ
어요
먹어요
마시다 (to drink)
마시
ㅣ
어요
마셔요 (contraction)
하다 (to do)
하
—
—
해요 (irregular)
Rule of thumb: if the last vowel of the stem is ㅏ or ㅗ, use 아요. Otherwise, 어요. The verb 하다 and all its compounds (공부하다, 일하다, 사랑하다) always become 해요, 공부해요, 일해요, 사랑해요.
Examples:
저는 한국어를 공부해요. — "I study Korean."
친구는 물을 마셔요. — "My friend drinks water." (마시 + 어요 → 마셔요)
안 — "don't" / "not" (I choose not to, or it's simply not the case)
못 — "can't" (I am unable)
Placement: both go directly before the verb.
Examples:
저는 술을 안 마셔요. — "I don't drink alcohol." (choice)
저는 술을 못 마셔요. — "I can't drink alcohol." (inability — allergy, religion, age)
오늘은 시간이 없어서 못 가요. — "I can't go today because I don't have time."
You will also see long-form negation: 마시지 않아요 ("don't drink") and 마시지 못해요 ("can't drink"). These mean the same thing but sound more formal/emphatic. For everyday speech, stick with 안 / 못.
Common mistake: Confusing 안 and 못. If someone asks if you drink, "안 마셔요" means "I don't drink" (choice). "못 마셔요" means "I can't drink" (something stops me). The social implications are different.
A handful of verbs have irregular honorific forms: 먹다 → 드시다, 자다 → 주무시다, 있다 → 계시다, 말하다 → 말씀하시다. Memorize these three or four and you will cover 90% of honorific cases.
Common mistake: Using -시- for yourself. Honorifics elevate the subject — but you never elevate yourself. Say "저는 가요" not "저는 가세요." Our politeness post goes into exactly when honorifics matter most.
Sentences rarely stand alone. Master four connectors and you can string ideas together naturally.
그리고 — "and" / "and then"
그런데 — "but" / "by the way" (soft contrast, topic pivot)
그래서 — "so" / "therefore"
하지만 — "however" / "but" (stronger contrast)
Examples:
저는 커피를 마셔요. 그리고 친구도 커피를 마셔요. — "I drink coffee. And my friend also drinks coffee."
저는 한국어를 공부해요. 그런데 어려워요. — "I study Korean. But it's hard."
오늘 피곤해요. 그래서 집에 있어요. — "I'm tired today. So I'm staying home."
그녀는 예뻐요. 하지만 성격이 안 좋아요. — "She's pretty. However, her personality is bad."
Common mistake: Using 그리고 when you want a soft "but." "저는 학생이에요. 그리고 일해요." technically means "I'm a student, and I work." If you want to highlight the contrast (a student who also works — unusual), reach for 그런데.
Questions in Korean use the same sentence structure as statements — you just insert a question word and raise the intonation at the end.
Korean
Meaning
뭐
what
어디
where
언제
when
누구
who
왜
why
어떻게
how
Examples:
뭐 먹어요? — "What are you eating?"
어디 가요? — "Where are you going?"
언제 와요? — "When are you coming?"
누구랑 있어요? — "Who are you with?"
왜 울어요? — "Why are you crying?"
어떻게 해요? — "How do you do it?"
Common mistake: Adding 이에요/예요 unnecessarily. "뭐예요?" is correct for "what is it?" but for action questions like "what are you eating?" the verb carries the meaning — "뭐 먹어요?" is complete.
Now that you have the ten pillars, here is how we recommend you practice them in order:
Start by reading short Korean sentences and circling the particles. Build fluency in recognizing 은/는/이/가/을/를 before worrying about anything else.
Drill the 해요 form with 10–15 common verbs (가다, 오다, 먹다, 마시다, 보다, 하다, 공부하다, 일하다, 자다, 살다). Repetition is everything here.
Combine the 해요 form with each particle until sentence construction is automatic.
Layer on past tense, then negation.
Only once your base is solid should you add honorifics and connectors.
For structured review, our grammar cheat sheet gives you a single-page reference with every particle, verb ending, and honorific. When you want to test yourself, head to the interactive quiz — there is a beginner-grammar track that drills exactly these ten topics.
For curated posts organized by grammar concept, see our grammar topic page and the full posts archive. If you are already thinking about TOPIK, the TOPIK hub maps these beginner pillars to the skills the exam rewards.
Most dedicated learners can hold a simple conversation after three to six months of consistent study — say 30–60 minutes a day with spaced repetition and some speaking practice. The ten pillars in this guide are the foundation; expect two to three weeks per pillar if you want to truly internalize each one before moving to the next. Faster than that and the particles will slide around your brain without ever sticking.
Together. The contrast between them is the entire point — studying one in isolation does not reveal what the other is for. Work through side-by-side examples from day one. Our dedicated post on 은/는 vs 이/가 is the single best starting point.
No. Modern Korean is written entirely in Hangul, and grammar works the same whether or not you know 한자. That said, roughly 60% of Korean vocabulary is Sino-Korean in origin, so knowing a few hundred common 한자 roots will accelerate your vocabulary acquisition enormously — but this is a vocabulary optimization, not a grammar requirement.
Pick 10 verbs you use daily, conjugate them in 해요-form, past tense, negative, and honorific forms, and write 20 sentences per verb. Do this for the same 10 verbs for a full week before adding new ones. Conjugation is muscle memory — repetition beats theory. Use our quiz verb-drill mode for spaced repetition.
After you are comfortable with 해요 form. The 합니다 form (합쇼체) is used in formal settings — news broadcasts, business meetings, military contexts — but not in daily conversation with friends. For the first 6 months, put 95% of your energy into mastering 해요 and a little into 해체 (casual). Save 합니다 for when you are ready to watch Korean news without subtitles.
Yes. Ask yourself: "is something happening at this location?" If yes — a verb of action — use 에서 (공부해요, 만나요, 먹어요). If the sentence is just about existence or destination (있어요, 가요, 와요), use 에. One more trick: 에서 pairs naturally with "from," 에 never does. "서울에서 왔어요" = "I came from Seoul." You cannot say "서울에 왔어요" to mean "came from."
That is the full roadmap. Master these ten pillars and you have scaffolded everything you need for TOPIK I preparation and everyday fluency. Revisit this guide weekly for the first two months — your understanding of the particles will deepen every time you reread it. When you are ready for post-level detail, the posts archive and our grammar topic feed have hundreds of worked examples waiting for you.