How to THINK in Korean | Our Tips

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  • Опубликовано: 15 июл 2024
  • Are you practicing Korean by thinking in Korean? This is a simple way to practice that’s sometimes easier said than done. I sat down with Forrest and we shared our tips for how you can think in Korean.
    Special thanks to Forrest for his tips about motivation: / seoul_4est
    Want to start learning Korean? Check out my book, "Korean Made Simple" on Amazon: amzn.to/2bDBi6h (affiliate)
    Please consider supporting me on Patreon: / gobillykorean
    "GO! Billy Korean" merch is out now! teespring.com/stores/gobillyk...
    Become a member of GoBillyKorean: / @gobillykorean
    00:00 Intro
    02:22 Increase Your Exposure
    03:32 Focus on the Idea
    05:15 Set Aside Time
    06:10 "The Room" Analogy
    08:02 Extra Tips
    Learn Korean with GoBillyKorean! Subscribe for weekly videos! goo.gl/9Dm5g
    Music by Kevin MacLeod: “MJS Strings" and “Brightly Fancy.” (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 (creativecommons.org/licenses/b...)

Комментарии • 41

  • @eundongpark1672
    @eundongpark1672 Год назад +21

    I talk to myself constantly in spanish (in my head) having imaginary conversations (all those witty comebacks I'd never have the wit to deliver in realtime). I don't even have to deliberately decide to practice in my head, I just realise that I'm doing it. So now that I'm trying to learn Korean, I have to deliberately decide to have my self-dialogue in Korean. Often in the shower I will try to refine or extend whatever sentence I'm saying in my head.If it works like Spanish self-talk did for me, it will help a lot. When I come across things I want to say but can't because I lack the vocab or grammar, the mental work of working my sentence around the gap in my knowledge, finding other ways to get the idea across, is in itself great practice for me too because 1. it's simply more practice, 2. it increases my curiosity about the thing I didn't know which, in turn, helps me retain the answer once I found it out. I feel like the ease with which I can search for answers sometimes means I retain less

  • @ajrt_2118
    @ajrt_2118 Год назад +15

    Going to sound REALLY strange, but I sometimes imagine having conversations with Korean celebrities I admire. So, if it's a musician, dancer, or chef or someone who works out a lot, I'll imagine talking to them about those things. The introvert in me has entire conversations this way. 🙈

    • @erichansen9669
      @erichansen9669 Год назад +1

      It's not really strange. It's a pretty common trick for media personalities too. I.e.: doing RUclips or a podcast solo, it allows the vocalization to sound and flow more naturally for most. Radio hosts will do it too.

    • @ajrt_2118
      @ajrt_2118 Год назад

      @@erichansen9669 😅 Thanks, meant the strange bit was the imaginary convo with my favs. But I feel better now.

    • @gronizherz3603
      @gronizherz3603 Год назад +1

      due to using a lot of music to repeat and learn languages .. I'm definitely guilty of this too :)

  • @JamesTermy
    @JamesTermy Год назад +12

    Thanks for these, let me see what I can add:
    1. A daily journal at least writing one sentence a day (I also put kdrama notes and other activities (e.g. notes of this lesson) each day)
    -Been using ChatGPT and Mirinae to verify sentences it's not perfect, but it does help (so that I don't over burden my native speaking friends)
    2. To expand on using what is around you idea:
    when making this a habit, I have found the Korean thought to respond before English, and I let the thought follow through. Sometimes I'll just blurt it out, and it drives my kids crazy. Sometimes I'll follow up with the Korean response under my breath when I say something. When doing a boring job like moving boxes is the best... I may swear, but no one will understand me... Sometimes it sounds like a kdrama scene sometimes haha, but the way I see it... I'm making the most of a boring situation and making it fun while getting more practice in at the same time.
    3. For grammar building... I've memorized some Kdrama lines, and when my mind is quiet, I'll play those lines in my mind. I focus on the order of the words as they run through my head, and what I see is a picture of thought between each 는 pause and how that thought gets further defined when 것 follows, the objects are being staged up, and then finally put to action. The order of the sentences has been the hardest mental barrier, but with these exercises I think I'm finally getting it.

  • @mm1ka
    @mm1ka Год назад +4

    for me the 2nd tip was crucial. had to realize it the hard way through my own experience before i saw it in this video though haha. as someone who writes heavily poetic stuff (both in my mother tongue and in english) i was naturally drawn to forming difficult sentences. at some point i realized that it's difficult to understand what point i'm trying to get across whenever i write in korean. then i was like - ok, i need to simplify and simplify and simplify and pay more attention to how korean speakers express similar thoughts/ideas to mine in korean that's more natural.
    thank you for making this video!!! such helpful and insightful tips

  • @paulwalther5237
    @paulwalther5237 Год назад +12

    The good advice just never stops on this channel. I’m going to make this my New Year’s resolution.

  • @strawberryfields3883
    @strawberryfields3883 Год назад +16

    Love all the tips, thank you!! What I've been trying to do lately, as someone who enjoys writing as a hobby, I try to come up with short stories (or even just dialogues) directly in Korean and write them down to later on correct them. I don't know if it's a good technique but I do find that after writing in Korean for a while, my brain is more prone to stick to it and so I am much more likely to keep on forming sentences in Korean in my brain for quite some time before going back to my native language

    • @sm00re2
      @sm00re2 Год назад

      this was actually the biggest way that i learned korean lol you can post them on hellotalk for natives to correct. and its fun to look back on as you advance so definitely keep up with it:)

    • @sm00re2
      @sm00re2 Год назад +3

      also, as someone who learned like this... my writing is WAY more advanced than my speaking. so definitely try to say the stories OUTLOUD as well. its weird how the brain (at least mine) operates differently when speaking outloud vs when writing or even speaking in your head. its been my personal downfall honestly haha cause i very rarely speak outloud :/ good luck in your studies~~

    • @strawberryfields3883
      @strawberryfields3883 Год назад +2

      @@sm00re2 thank you so much for the tip! I'll try as you say, I think it's gonna be a lot more helpful to "think and speak" on the go! But I'm really happy to know it worked for you, it makes me feel more confident about it 💕

  • @deb4908
    @deb4908 Год назад +5

    All really good tips. Especially like the room analogy and ‘describing the things you see around you’.

  • @cherierussell5017
    @cherierussell5017 Год назад

    I love this video sooo much!! Loads of great tips!! Thank you. You guys did a great job with this.🥳🥳👏👏👏👏

  • @thequeen1546
    @thequeen1546 Год назад +1

    The room!! Love it!

  • @tutusepgu
    @tutusepgu Год назад +2

    ‘The room’ idea is so smart!! Great vid with great tips!! 땡큐🥹

  • @deirdremckprice7702
    @deirdremckprice7702 Год назад +1

    Wonderful and practical advice.

  • @ferfykins
    @ferfykins Год назад +1

    Ty for the video!!

  • @sue008A
    @sue008A Год назад +2

    Very good ideas.... I will incorporate them into my daily Korean language learning. I like to watch Men on a Mission. A new one I started watching is Korea N1. I guess I can practice my Korean if I'm tossing and turning in bed when I can't get to sleep.

  • @sylvita518
    @sylvita518 Год назад +1

    watch like 4 korean shows,2 days and 1 night(love it),Knowing bros,Runnung man ( not always) and My little old Child 😄,I enjoy each one.👍

  • @dutchessdreamer4543
    @dutchessdreamer4543 Год назад +1

    To start thinking in other languages I’ve started watching content in other languages. Starting with children’s shows and working my way up to college level lectures. I watch them on my smart TV.

  • @sooamin4534
    @sooamin4534 Год назад

    Very very usefull. thank you very much ^^

  • @soRealKorean
    @soRealKorean Год назад

    언어를 배우는데 필요한 좋은 팁들을 알려주셔서 감사합니다. 저같은 경우 외국어를 배웠을 때, 계속해서 '혼잣말'을 외국어로 많이 했었어요. 그러다 보니 자연적으로 생각도 외국어로 하게 되더라구요.

  • @joshuasohn301
    @joshuasohn301 5 месяцев назад

    These are great tips that can help learn a second language. I wish you gave examples in Korean for each tip!

  • @emu2329
    @emu2329 Год назад

    tip #2 is the tip i really needed. i catch myself everytime trying too hard , because i know so much more than i can actually produce. it's frustrating.

  • @yeseniagomez9254
    @yeseniagomez9254 Год назад

    I liked the room analogy.
    Anyone recommend a good TV show to watch, that would help?

  • @sm00re2
    @sm00re2 Год назад

    i replay conversations in my head. like after i have a convo with someone ill translate it in my head and ask a native for help when im stuck. or i will have a completely fake convo in my head and then have a native correct it lol its silly but it helps

  • @ZomBeadsCL
    @ZomBeadsCL Год назад

    I remember when I was still in the process of learning english I un/consciously started trying to think in English and trying to translate whatever I heard/saw into English and gosh it helped sososo much, but as I said it got to the point where it was something unconscious and I literally couldn't stop it even if I tried, it became really REALLY annoying til I guess I learned enough that it wasn't 'this is new, this is new, this is new' but just that my brain actually learned the language lol

  • @rumple503
    @rumple503 Год назад

    Anyone have suggestions for Korean variety shows and where to see them?

  • @ariellebeamer2956
    @ariellebeamer2956 Год назад

    what do you do at the very beginning when learning a language? I feel like I know what to do later in a language, but the beginning feels really hard😅

  • @ImElliePaige
    @ImElliePaige Год назад +1

    I have two fears about learning korean. One, what if when I become fluent in korean, my inner monolouge will change to korean and I wont be able to switch it back. Two, until I become fluent in korean, korean people wont know how funny I am because I wont be able to express myself like a native. 😔✌

    • @gronizherz3603
      @gronizherz3603 Год назад

      fear 1. you will likely have the linguist struggle of "no way, I forgot/don't know what this word is in my own mother tounge, but I know it in korean!"
      fear 2. start light. no one starts by saying "it's raining bloody cats and dogs, innit?", they learn "It is raining a lot" :) You'll learn the funnier terms eventually

  • @Babluraja1516
    @Babluraja1516 Год назад +1

    I am first to comment just telling lol

  • @brookParsons
    @brookParsons Год назад

    Love Y'all 💝💜🙏🏼😇💜 so Nomu'Kin'7'angi...

  • @dutchessdreamer4543
    @dutchessdreamer4543 Год назад

    I have a suggestion. Make a video on Korean dating culture and how to flirt in Korean.

    • @GoBillyKorean
      @GoBillyKorean  Год назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/D-NEOCWrwfc/видео.html

  • @Fluglecheese
    @Fluglecheese Год назад

    Did this video come out already previously? I feel like I've seen it already

    • @GoBillyKorean
      @GoBillyKorean  Год назад +1

      Maybe you saw this one? ruclips.net/video/Z6w6PUYqtvw/видео.html

    • @Fluglecheese
      @Fluglecheese Год назад

      @@GoBillyKorean That might have been it!