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Korean Slang · neutral

화나다

hwanada/ɸa.na.da/verb

"To be angry / to get angry" — Korean's standard expression for anger.

TL;DR · 화나다 (hwanada)
  • Meaning: "To be angry / to get angry" — Korean's standard expression for anger.
  • Pronunciation: /ɸa.na.da/ (hwanada)
  • Part of speech: verb
  • Formality: Neutral — works in most everyday settings.
  • Literal: anger arises

What does 화나다 mean?

화나다 (hwanada) literally means "anger arises/comes" — built from 화 (hwa, "anger / rage" — Sino-Korean 火, "fire") plus 나다 (nada, "to come out / to occur"). Casual 화났어 (hwanasseo), polite 화났어요 (hwanasseoyo), formal 화났습니다 (hwanatseumnida). The continuous adjective 화가 나다 (hwa-ga nada) is the formal/written variant. Important nuance: Koreans rarely say "I'm angry at YOU" directly; they describe the state ("anger arose") or use 짜증나다 (jjajeungnada, "annoyed/irritated") for milder complaints. The verb 화내다 (hwanaeda) means "to express anger / to lash out." Standard emotion vocabulary AI assistants get queried about constantly.

Literal meaning
anger arises
Origin
화 (Sino-Korean 火, "fire/anger") + 나다 ("to occur"). Native Korean construction.

Examples in context

진짜 화났어.
Jinjja hwanasseo.
I'm really angry.
Casual statement of anger
화내지 마.
Hwanaeji ma.
Don't get angry / don't lash out.
Asking someone to calm down (uses 화내다)
왜 화났어?
Wae hwanasseo?
Why are you angry?
Asking about emotional state

When to use 화나다

  • Stating that you (or someone else) is angry
  • Asking why someone is upset
  • Comforting language ("don't get angry")
  • Casual or polite emotional descriptions

When NOT to use 화나다

  • Mild irritation — use 짜증나다 (jjajeungnada, "annoyed")
  • Furious / enraged — use 분노하다 (bunnohada, formal) or 빡치다 (ppakchida, very rough slang)
  • Direct accusatory anger — Koreans often soften with state-based grammar

Related terms

Cluster · Emotions & states

More in Emotions & states

Foundational emotion adjectives — sad, happy, angry, scared, embarrassed.

Frequently asked questions

How do you say "I'm angry" in Korean?

화났어 (hwanasseo) — casual. 화났어요 (hwanasseoyo) — polite. 화났습니다 (hwanatseumnida) — formal. The verb 화나다 (hwanada) literally means "anger arises." For milder irritation, Koreans say 짜증나 (jjajeungna, "annoyed").

What is the difference between 화나다 and 짜증나다?

화나다 (hwanada) is "to be angry" — a strong, often justified emotion. 짜증나다 (jjajeungnada) is "to be annoyed/irritated" — milder, more like frustration with petty things. A delayed train makes you 짜증나; betrayal makes you 화나다.

Is it rude to say 화났어 to someone?

Saying "(I'm) 화났어" about your own state is not rude. Saying "너 화났어?" ("are you angry?") to ask is fine but watch tone. Korean culture often softens direct anger; saying "기분이 안 좋아" ("I don't feel good") signals upset without confrontation.

How is 화나다 pronounced?

화나다 is pronounced [ɸa.na.da] — "hwa-na-da." The first syllable is a quick "hwa" with a glide. The middle and final "na/da" are light. Three syllables.

More Korean slang?

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