What's up guys! Did you enjoy the video? It's my first sponsored video. I've got quite a lot of offers so far, but I haven't accepted them. Because I couldn't recommend it to you guys confidently. But this time, I got an offer from a good service. So I decided to accept it. I want to thank you for your supports. That's all because of you. I really appreciate it. I'll see you on the next videos. Have a good one! ----------------------------------------------------- ✔Hilokal - Get 1 week Premium for free! Download the app through the link below! hilokal.page.link/2DpTb
Korean, along with Japanese, is probably the language with the largest number of people learning it relative to the population of native speakers. South Korea's cultural influence is truly remarkable, motivating many people to learn Korean.
What's impressive is that all these people learned Korean as an adult. I am fluent in Korean and English. But not because I spent hours studying English or Korean. I was born in Korea, and grew up in America. I spoke Korean at home and English outside. My parents forced me to read Korean books at home and that's the only reason why I'm still able to read and write Korean. In short, I got lucky. it takes zero effort to be fluent in a language when you're 9 years old. These people were full grown adults and their Korean is probably better than mine. Sure they have an accent and I do not, but I'm guessing their vocabulary is larger than mine. I'm a full grown adult now and if you asked me to pick up another language like Japanese, there's no wa I'd be able to do it. I'm not that smart. So props to these people. And to those of you that are bilingual or trilingual because you lived in a certain country as a youngster, that's no big deal. Anybody can do that. Actually learning another language as an adult, like these people - that takes SKILL.
It's not about smarts. Don't degrade yourself. It's all a out effort and breaking down that fear. Your fear is failure. The only way of getting over that is to face it head on. So I do challenge you to learn Japanese to overcome that fear. Once you do that I challenge to learn other stuff, languages, skills or another things. Slowly you will gain confidence in yourself and be successful. Go get em!
I'm a Korean Canadian who's also fluent in both although my vocabulary is lacking a bit. But when I visited Korea, I became quite fluent with increased vocabulary within a week. Being immersed and surrounded by Korean language and people really affects one's learning curve. I remained fluent in Korean even though I didn't go to Korean language school bc my parents always spoke Korean to me at home. And this is thanks to my Gr.8 homeroom teacher who when asked by my parents if they should speak only in English so I could learn faster, replied, "No! In fact you should speak Korean. He will learn English bc he lives here. That's a given. But if you don't speak Korean to him, he will eventually forget it." My parents still talk about that and are thankful to that teacher for his important advice.
My wife says most Korean Americans who are diasporic heritage speakers who arrived abroad at a young age tend to speak like children...well into adulthood. We live in LA, so there are a lot of people like that, but they talk like children. Even the intonation is frozen in baby-time....which is jarring for her because they can be 40 years old and sound like elementary school kids.
For foreigners who are English speaker, Just knowing how to speak Korean can open up career opportunities. There aren't many foreigners who speak Korean fluently, so if you do speak Korean, you can even have a chance to be famous in Korea by being on TV or RUclips.
as a person studying english speaking with Jin's videos I can really relate to those korean language learners. There's no other way of learning a language but to be exposed to a language as much as I can. It's hard to embrace myself making mistakes but it's essential you know. Let's do it. no one cares about our grammer errors.
I started studying Korean 15 days ago ( after watching series for almost two years ) and I am so happy and enjoy every minute! I can read a 3 syllable word and the actors names to the series I watch ! I study 1 hour every day and every weekend revision.
This was honesty helpful, I've been self studying Korean for a little over a year now and my biggest issue is not having anyone to speak the language with......😢😢. That makes it harder, I think, but my goal is to move there and teach English so I'm gonna keep trying!! Thanks for all your helpful vids!! 🎉❤
Just knowing how to speak korean can open up career opportunities. Yeah you should move to Korea if you want to learn the language and maybe use it as a career.
I tried learning Korean in 2014-2015 at Madrid Korean Cultural Centre, but they only accepted 20-25 students per year, so it was quite hard to enter. I tried in 2012 and 2013 and had to wait a lot until there was a free position. Too bad, because they only offered 2 hours per week, and that wasn't acceptable. You easily forget what you learnt in previous weeks at such pace. I ended quitting because their schedules were incompatible with jobs, since classes were from 16:30 to 18:30, so I did 1st level (60 hours, even though each book was designed to be taught in 75 hours) and another 60 hours for the 2nd level in the following year when I already was 44. As I was unemployed and broke at the time, preparing TOPIK was even out of the equation. 😭
I feel like this video was really very informative and will be very helpful. Saving it to reference again in the future, thank you so much for making videos like this!
The girl who said she's been learning Korean for 3 months gave me hope! If she can do it then maybe so can I. I'm sure that if I put in the work every day and don't give up, most likely I will see the results fast too :)
I recommend you visit 4 or 5 universities in Seoul randomly. And ask the same question to all PhD. foreign students. You will be surprised that 99% foreign PhD. and master students can't speak korean, even spending more than 6 years in Korea. 😅
Language learning is a marathon not a sprint so find ways to make it fun and enjoyable! Not even a native speaker has a super big vocabulary at 5 years old so don't compare yourself to others and enjoy the journey! When I was learning English I was determined to speak like a native speaker, and learning all the grammar, vocabulary and perfecting my accent took over 20 years before I felt like I reached my goal of sounding like a native. I still feel nervous talking to a native speaker in English that I met for the first time... no matter your level you're doing great! Trust me it's about the fun and the self fulfillment! It's about the journey! All the words that you know now you didn't know before! That's amazing you know. :)
I started my journey recently to learn Korean and I hope to get fluent one day! Thank you for this video it was nice getting some advice from how others got good at Korean! ✨
I have been learning Korean for 9 months with a teacher! But because everything is English in any country you have to find ways to help yourself. I listen to a Korean audio books every day, I watch the news on kbs, I read Korean books and fairy tales and whenever I watch a series I have Korean subtitles underneath or if it's animation I put Korean audio and Greek subtitles! My goal is the last language degree to study in Korea but I'm 36 years old and I don't know if they will accept me... in Greece you can be a student at all ages in Korea I don't know yet I haven't looked! But with my husband our goal is to live at least one year in Korea!! The video helped me a lot because I see that , when you take the language you are learning seriously, you find ways to improve!!
Great video Jin!!! Honestly, I am realizing that learning a language is a lot of commitment and it is almost similar to going to the gym or fitness center. You don’t workout, you won’t see the outcomes. You workout, you will see the outcome. Obviously, the outcomes come in a longterm basis. 유투브 동영상을 진짜 좋아해요. 고마워요~. 정말 잘했어요. 그럼 다음 동영살까지 ^^.
🙏Merci! Et bravo 👏!! Le format est top👌 Je trouve que les échanges sont très fluides et très intéressants; les vidéos sont très sympas à regarder! 📺Vivement la prochaine JIN’s street interview !👍🌈☀️😎
Excellent advice, from all , I learned English by watching kids shows, the basics, of course, I would like to learn Korean the same way, but it is difficult to find in RUclips, kids Korean shows. I practice a lot of listening going to Korean town in New Jersey, however I am not feel confident enough to speak it 😢
This was awesome and gave me many different options I had never heard of or considered to learning a new language. Thank you for this thoughtful interview.
Let's all take a moment and appreciate the fact that all the interviewees are AT LEAST trilingual if not more. With increasing advancement with translation apps, many people - including myself - tend to rely on them when traveling abroad. But learning a foreign language does more than just teach you a new way of listening and speaking. It creates new pathways in your brain, and it helps with memory, analysis, creativity, etc. So in fact, it helps you become smarter!
English doesn't really count as a language people study because of how much exposure there's around. And I'd say the way to really learn a language is to study the basics quickly enough to reach the point when you can enjoy and benefit from exposure to this language.
@@retroanimEnglish really is a language. Exposure means nothing. I can sing songs in languages and still not be able to function in a country that speaks the language. Your comment is incredibly dismissive and ignorant. Many people who come to English speaking countries have to work very hard to learn the language and to get a well paying job. Also English speaking countries have cultures that are tied to their language.
@@carrington2949 So true! Many people speak broken english and not the real language because they think that they don't need to learn grammar vocabulary etc. So infuriating.
I’ve been watching your videos quite a time and love it… I’m brazilian so my native language is Portuguese but I speak fluent English and Spanish also… when I was leaving in NY city I used to work in the Korean 32St. District and the Deli owner begins to teach me some words… now I’m back in Brazil and I’m learning to speak Korean… we have here a Korean Community with about 70.000 people… keep doing your excellent videos… Annyeo fighting 🫰🏻😘
yeah it’s pretty realistic Ive been in Korea for like 6 months, and I’m more outgoing, and I’m always just striking up conversations withh strangers, and then be stern with them and tell them to only speak Korean I’ve seen a massive difference in my ability AND my comfort level using the language in a short amount of time
what an amazing video! I feel like i picked up some new tricks that will help me with learning. thanks to both the creator and the learners interviewed!!!! :D
8:53 that French girl is exceptionally good at speaking English. I'm British. She flows and expresses emotion in a way foreigners often don't. She's a speaking-focused language learner and her imitation ideas are awesome. Also, 6:49 Write a diary 2:23 Read out loud.
Hangul(Korean alphabet) is easy to master. I bet it only needs half a day for you to learn. But the Korean language is very hard even you are a native Korean. I have still difficulty in communicating with my Korean wife although I am Korean…😢
Jin, you're such a fantastic and attentive interviewer. I'd only just come across your channel a few weeks ago and have watched so many of your videos. I really hope you get a lot more subscribers - 💯k by Christmas, fingers crossed!
Greetings from Romania! I'm a Romanian Aromanian, living in Romania, I studied as first languages English and some Italian, then I decided to go to Translation and Interpreting University(Applied Modern Languages), in English and Italia, I graduated, I've been working in Italian since 2018 when I graduated university and now I speak Romanian, Aromanian, Italian, English some Greek and I want to learn Korean too.
The first woman is disciplined. She also has a pretty high level English accent. Norwegians can generally speak okay English. But they tend to have...accents.
18 years~28 years Man, Average height S, KOREA - 5 feet 9 (177cm), CHINA - 5 feet 3 inch (165cm), JAPAN - 5 feet 4.5 inch (165.5cm), Thailand,Vietnam Etc. Southeast Asia - 5 feet 2.5 inch (159.5cm) I think, One of the reasons that popular korea wave in Asia... The height is higher and large body and Cool~.
Hi ! Thanks for this interesting video. The people you interviewed were supposed to be fluent in Korean. I think that would have been nice to hear them give all their advices or most of them in Korean. But maybe it would have been too much work of translation with English subtitles after ? I don’t know the processes of making these videos… ☺️
That lady from Norway is incredibly bright and articulate and disciplined. The way she did everything right is truly amazing and her Korean is REALLY impressive and better than some people I know who have lived in Korea for more than 10 years. I'm guessing she went to the Yonsei University language school. Amazing interview.
2:10 My exgirlfriend who's from Taiwan said the same when she moved to sweden "You must only speak to me in Swedish" Im not sure it made it whole lot easier but it sure helped alot :P I respect people moving to other countries, learning their language and all that comes with it
"How long have you learned Korean?" is not the best way to ask this question, rather, I would say "How long have you been learning Korean?" or "How long did it take you to learn Korean?".
I am forever resentful that my mom wanted to teach me Korean but was forced not to. Bilingual kids have superior abilities. I need to be perfect and fluent because I don't want native Korean speakers to even be able to tell.
i admire all these people so much! ive been trying to learn myself and always get side tracked lols.why do i do this to myself haha smh ,i need to get on top of it. good advice they have too.
Korean may actually be one of the easiest Asian languages for English speakers to learn. First it is NOT tonal and seems to stress both vowels and consonants. Also the Hagul is alphabetic and not characters and reputedly very easy for anyone who knows the spoken language.
I recommend you visit 4 or 5 universities in Seoul randomly. And ask the same question to all PhD. foreign students. You will be surprised that 99% foreign PhD. and master students can't speak korean, even spending more than 6 years in Korea. 😅
@SnakePlantCollector coincidently, 99% PhD and Master students I know personally from India, Bangladesh and Pakistan they can't speak korean. But when these people go to Spain, South America, and Arabic countries, they get fluent in spainish, Arabic, etc within a year. Do you mean they get extra smartness after moving there?
@SnakePlantCollector My brother is working in Kuwait. He got fluent in Arabic without any language course within a year. But it's been 5 years in Korea, and I can't speak korean.... Do you think my brother is more smart and intelligent ? I can't even speak basic korean after 5 years, so I am not intelligent? The reason isn't like that, my dear. The reason is very shocking. You need to find the actual reason.
@sports_boy129 Actually, I don't need to find out. It just means you didn't learn or speak the language with other people often. Korean is not really a hard language to learn. The letters are more scientific developed than any other languages.
thank you jin for the video. i appreciate all the efforts you put in for the channel. also... i am really intrigued by this app hilokal .. but i am worried how much does it cost after the free trial lol
I wonder what made Ingrid come back to Korea AGAIN and why after going back home to Norway despite having lived for 3 years, long enough to know quite a bit about Korea. I can read a passion in her with which she wants to achieve something.
Even as a foreigner living in Korea, learning Hangul doesn't improve your job outlook whatsoever. No matter how fluent one becomes, you are outwardly facing a foreigner and always will be. Even if you are equally fluent and higher skilled than a Korean applying for the same job, you are unlikely to be hired because of the added headache of paperwork, visas, and what not. If you want to become fluent to socialize and make friends, cool more power to ya. Just don't expect to learn Hangul and suddenly become more employable or earn more money.
What's up guys! Did you enjoy the video?
It's my first sponsored video.
I've got quite a lot of offers so far, but I haven't accepted them.
Because I couldn't recommend it to you guys confidently.
But this time, I got an offer from a good service. So I decided to accept it.
I want to thank you for your supports. That's all because of you. I really appreciate it.
I'll see you on the next videos.
Have a good one!
-----------------------------------------------------
✔Hilokal - Get 1 week Premium for free!
Download the app through the link below!
hilokal.page.link/2DpTb
Thanks for this recommendation, I'm going to try it!
Thank u☺️👍
wow first sponsor!! it would be really helpful to all the subscribers~~~❤❤❤ congratulations from my heart
A video about how fluent people speak Korean and then they speak englisch... why?
한녕하세요 I've been studying Korean for 5 months now. I am enjoying it a lot. I learned English and Spanish back in 2001. My first language is Portuguese.
멋지네요! 응원할게요 - from commen korean person -
멋져요. 응원할게요
벌써 5개월이나 되었다니 대단해요
어썸
한녕하세요 X
안녕하세요 ㅇ
@@할거없다-c7v너 친구 없지? 지적하고 있네
Wow Ingrid from Norway is very impressive. Her determination in learning Korean in such a short time is amazing
Agreed. So dedicated to learning Korean.
Yes, and her English is spot on. No accent either. Very inspiring!
True she has that accent. She sounds so natural that couldn’t even tell her apart from a Korean.
Korean, along with Japanese, is probably the language with the largest number of people learning it relative to the population of native speakers. South Korea's cultural influence is truly remarkable, motivating many people to learn Korean.
Irish.....
What's impressive is that all these people learned Korean as an adult. I am fluent in Korean and English. But not because I spent hours studying English or Korean. I was born in Korea, and grew up in America. I spoke Korean at home and English outside. My parents forced me to read Korean books at home and that's the only reason why I'm still able to read and write Korean. In short, I got lucky. it takes zero effort to be fluent in a language when you're 9 years old. These people were full grown adults and their Korean is probably better than mine. Sure they have an accent and I do not, but I'm guessing their vocabulary is larger than mine. I'm a full grown adult now and if you asked me to pick up another language like Japanese, there's no wa I'd be able to do it. I'm not that smart. So props to these people. And to those of you that are bilingual or trilingual because you lived in a certain country as a youngster, that's no big deal. Anybody can do that. Actually learning another language as an adult, like these people - that takes SKILL.
It's not about smarts. Don't degrade yourself. It's all a out effort and breaking down that fear. Your fear is failure. The only way of getting over that is to face it head on. So I do challenge you to learn Japanese to overcome that fear. Once you do that I challenge to learn other stuff, languages, skills or another things. Slowly you will gain confidence in yourself and be successful. Go get em!
Its not intelligence or smarts just dedication and determination, effort * time = results.
Well, it's not zero effort if you read books 😅
I'm a Korean Canadian who's also fluent in both although my vocabulary is lacking a bit. But when I visited Korea, I became quite fluent with increased vocabulary within a week. Being immersed and surrounded by Korean language and people really affects one's learning curve.
I remained fluent in Korean even though I didn't go to Korean language school bc my parents always spoke Korean to me at home. And this is thanks to my Gr.8 homeroom teacher who when asked by my parents if they should speak only in English so I could learn faster, replied, "No! In fact you should speak Korean. He will learn English bc he lives here. That's a given. But if you don't speak Korean to him, he will eventually forget it."
My parents still talk about that and are thankful to that teacher for his important advice.
My wife says most Korean Americans who are diasporic heritage speakers who arrived abroad at a young age tend to speak like children...well into adulthood. We live in LA, so there are a lot of people like that, but they talk like children. Even the intonation is frozen in baby-time....which is jarring for her because they can be 40 years old and sound like elementary school kids.
For foreigners who are English speaker, Just knowing how to speak Korean can open up career opportunities. There aren't many foreigners who speak Korean fluently, so if you do speak Korean, you can even have a chance to be famous in Korea by being on TV or RUclips.
Like Paul Seoul!
as a person studying english speaking with Jin's videos I can really relate to those korean language learners. There's no other way of learning a language but to be exposed to a language as much as I can. It's hard to embrace myself making mistakes but it's essential you know. Let's do it. no one cares about our grammer errors.
Yes, let's goooo!
잘 봤습니다. 전 미국인인데 이제 한국어를 배운지 벌써 3년이나 됐네요. 이번 10월에 토픽 시험을 드디어 볼 계획이라 공부를 열심히 하겠으며 앞으로도 이처럼 보기가 재밌는 컨텐츠를 찍어올리셨으면 좋겠습니다.
와 한국말 진짜 잘한다 ㅋㅋㅋㅋ 한국어 공부해주셔서 감사해여
글을 되게 잘 쓰실 뿐만 아니라, 띄어 쓰기가 웬만한 한국인보다 더 좋네요!
I started studying Korean 15 days ago ( after watching series for almost two years ) and I am so happy and enjoy every minute! I can read a 3 syllable word and the actors names to the series I watch ! I study 1 hour every day and every weekend revision.
This was honesty helpful, I've been self studying Korean for a little over a year now and my biggest issue is not having anyone to speak the language with......😢😢. That makes it harder, I think, but my goal is to move there and teach English so I'm gonna keep trying!! Thanks for all your helpful vids!! 🎉❤
Just knowing how to speak korean can open up career opportunities. Yeah you should move to Korea if you want to learn the language and maybe use it as a career.
@@grow1820 thank you , no one in my life has supported my goal, so it's refreshing to hear!
I tried learning Korean in 2014-2015 at Madrid Korean Cultural Centre, but they only accepted 20-25 students per year, so it was quite hard to enter. I tried in 2012 and 2013 and had to wait a lot until there was a free position. Too bad, because they only offered 2 hours per week, and that wasn't acceptable. You easily forget what you learnt in previous weeks at such pace. I ended quitting because their schedules were incompatible with jobs, since classes were from 16:30 to 18:30, so I did 1st level (60 hours, even though each book was designed to be taught in 75 hours) and another 60 hours for the 2nd level in the following year when I already was 44. As I was unemployed and broke at the time, preparing TOPIK was even out of the equation. 😭
I feel like this video was really very informative and will be very helpful. Saving it to reference again in the future, thank you so much for making videos like this!
Wow! I really admire them. They work hard!!! Keep up the good work 👍
The girl who said she's been learning Korean for 3 months gave me hope! If she can do it then maybe so can I.
I'm sure that if I put in the work every day and don't give up, most likely I will see the results fast too :)
I recommend you visit 4 or 5 universities in Seoul randomly. And ask the same question to all PhD. foreign students. You will be surprised that 99% foreign PhD. and master students can't speak korean, even spending more than 6 years in Korea. 😅
Language learning is a marathon not a sprint so find ways to make it fun and enjoyable! Not even a native speaker has a super big vocabulary at 5 years old so don't compare yourself to others and enjoy the journey! When I was learning English I was determined to speak like a native speaker, and learning all the grammar, vocabulary and perfecting my accent took over 20 years before I felt like I reached my goal of sounding like a native. I still feel nervous talking to a native speaker in English that I met for the first time... no matter your level you're doing great! Trust me it's about the fun and the self fulfillment! It's about the journey! All the words that you know now you didn't know before! That's amazing you know. :)
I started my journey recently to learn Korean and I hope to get fluent one day! Thank you for this video it was nice getting some advice from how others got good at Korean! ✨
I have been learning Korean for 9 months with a teacher! But because everything is English in any country you have to find ways to help yourself. I listen to a Korean audio books every day, I watch the news on kbs, I read Korean books and fairy tales and whenever I watch a series I have Korean subtitles underneath or if it's animation I put Korean audio and Greek subtitles! My goal is the last language degree to study in Korea but I'm 36 years old and I don't know if they will accept me... in Greece you can be a student at all ages in Korea I don't know yet I haven't looked! But with my husband our goal is to live at least one year in Korea!! The video helped me a lot because I see that , when you take the language you are learning seriously, you find ways to improve!!
Ingrid! So proud of my niece!
Wonderful advice on learning Korean. Thanks for your help.
I love your videos, Jin. Thank you for all the effort you put into them. 🙏💫
Thank you very much!
Great video Jin!!! Honestly, I am realizing that learning a language is a lot of commitment and it is almost similar to going to the gym or fitness center. You don’t workout, you won’t see the outcomes. You workout, you will see the outcome. Obviously, the outcomes come in a longterm basis. 유투브 동영상을 진짜 좋아해요. 고마워요~. 정말 잘했어요. 그럼 다음 동영살까지 ^^.
This was so much helpful. I am learning little by little everyday
감사합니다 😁
There you go! I'm learning English everyday too :)) We can do it.
🙏Merci! Et bravo 👏!! Le format est top👌
Je trouve que les échanges sont très fluides et très intéressants; les vidéos sont très sympas à regarder! 📺Vivement la prochaine JIN’s street interview !👍🌈☀️😎
As someone learning Korea this was so helpful thank you so much
Excellent advice, from all , I learned English by watching kids shows, the basics, of course, I would like to learn Korean the same way, but it is difficult to find in RUclips, kids Korean shows.
I practice a lot of listening going to Korean town in New Jersey, however I am not feel confident enough to speak it 😢
Good and respectful interviews, keep it up
Thank you for this video. There's a lot of good tips. I'm going to use them.
This was awesome and gave me many different options I had never heard of or considered to learning a new language. Thank you for this thoughtful interview.
Let's all take a moment and appreciate the fact that all the interviewees are AT LEAST trilingual if not more. With increasing advancement with translation apps, many people - including myself - tend to rely on them when traveling abroad. But learning a foreign language does more than just teach you a new way of listening and speaking. It creates new pathways in your brain, and it helps with memory, analysis, creativity, etc. So in fact, it helps you become smarter!
English doesn't really count as a language people study because of how much exposure there's around. And I'd say the way to really learn a language is to study the basics quickly enough to reach the point when you can enjoy and benefit from exposure to this language.
@@retroanimEnglish really is a language. Exposure means nothing. I can sing songs in languages and still not be able to function in a country that speaks the language. Your comment is incredibly dismissive and ignorant. Many people who come to English speaking countries have to work very hard to learn the language and to get a well paying job. Also English speaking countries have cultures that are tied to their language.
@@carrington2949 So true! Many people speak broken english and not the real language because they think that they don't need to learn grammar vocabulary etc. So infuriating.
감사합니다. This video was very helpful.
Really enjoyed the video! Nice tips to learn Korean 👍🤩 All of the girls look so sweet!
thank you for filming a good video!
Thank you for watching!
I’ve been watching your videos quite a time and love it… I’m brazilian so my native language is Portuguese but I speak fluent English and Spanish also… when I was leaving in NY city I used to work in the Korean 32St. District and the Deli owner begins to teach me some words… now I’m back in Brazil and I’m learning to speak Korean… we have here a Korean Community with about 70.000 people… keep doing your excellent videos… Annyeo fighting 🫰🏻😘
I'm so amazed with their English level as well as their fluent Korean 😮
It's so helpful to see something like that😊
yeah it’s pretty realistic
Ive been in Korea for like 6 months, and I’m more outgoing, and I’m always just striking up conversations withh strangers, and then be stern with them and tell them to only speak Korean
I’ve seen a massive difference in my ability AND my comfort level using the language in a short amount of time
what an amazing video! I feel like i picked up some new tricks that will help me with learning. thanks to both the creator and the learners interviewed!!!! :D
8:53 that French girl is exceptionally good at speaking English. I'm British. She flows and expresses emotion in a way foreigners often don't. She's a speaking-focused language learner and her imitation ideas are awesome.
Also,
6:49 Write a diary
2:23 Read out loud.
Her Korean sounds awesome too!
Love the Egyptian girl energy and sweetness. So cute!
I enjoy all of your videos. This one about learning the language was very interesting and informative. Thank you!
The Norwegian girl and I share the exact same study method. I did exactly that to learn English.
Hangul(Korean alphabet) is easy to master. I bet it only needs half a day for you to learn. But the Korean language is very hard even you are a native Korean. I have still difficulty in communicating with my Korean wife although I am Korean…😢
Thank you for posting, I will use the advice/comments on learning language on picking up the piano
출연자 모두 대단합니다..
Im still in korean basic level, i know i will be master korean language with tons of effort and hard days, thank you for this inspirational video.
yes Jin I do enjoyed your video as always. and also I noticed you losing weight already you more looking good now. more to come. BLESSINGS!
Jin, you're such a fantastic and attentive interviewer. I'd only just come across your channel a few weeks ago and have watched so many of your videos. I really hope you get a lot more subscribers - 💯k by Christmas, fingers crossed!
Thank you so much!!😆
Greetings from Romania!
I'm a Romanian Aromanian, living in Romania, I studied as first languages English and some Italian, then I decided to go to Translation and Interpreting University(Applied Modern Languages), in English and Italia, I graduated, I've been working in Italian since 2018 when I graduated university and now I speak Romanian, Aromanian, Italian, English some Greek and I want to learn Korean too.
they all seem so nice!
The first woman is disciplined. She also has a pretty high level English accent. Norwegians can generally speak okay English. But they tend to have...accents.
Hello from Eastern Europe , Türkiye 🇹🇷
항상 잘 보고 갑니다
감사합니다🙂
It's impressive most of these people are trilingual, I also speak three languages, Korean, English and Spanish.
Wow.. Impressive girls!
Super impressive 🤯❤️❤️
this video is so helpful
This is the first time I’ve ever heard a Western foreigner say “Korean grammar is pretty simple” 😂😂
Korean celebs variety shows show Korean caption letters a lot on a screen that could help.
18 years~28 years Man, Average height
S, KOREA - 5 feet 9 (177cm), CHINA - 5 feet 3 inch (165cm), JAPAN - 5 feet 4.5 inch (165.5cm),
Thailand,Vietnam Etc. Southeast Asia - 5 feet 2.5 inch (159.5cm)
I think, One of the reasons that popular korea wave in Asia...
The height is higher and large body and Cool~.
흐미.. 노르웨이분 대단하시네요.
대단한 열정을 가진 인재네요.
햐.... 이런 컨텐츠를... 잘 만들었네....
Hi ! Thanks for this interesting video. The people you interviewed were supposed to be fluent in Korean. I think that would have been nice to hear them give all their advices or most of them in Korean. But maybe it would have been too much work of translation with English subtitles after ? I don’t know the processes of making these videos… ☺️
What's impressive is that they're all fluent English sprakers as well.
That lady from Norway is incredibly bright and articulate and disciplined. The way she did everything right is truly amazing and her Korean is REALLY impressive and better than some people I know who have lived in Korea for more than 10 years. I'm guessing she went to the Yonsei University language school. Amazing interview.
She speaks English fluently as well, let’s not forget that English is not her country’s first language.
2:10 My exgirlfriend who's from Taiwan said the same when she moved to sweden "You must only speak to me in Swedish" Im not sure it made it whole lot easier but it sure helped alot :P
I respect people moving to other countries, learning their language and all that comes with it
Haha! At 2:44 a drunk Korean man is being helped to walk by his friends. That's so Korea!
"How long have you learned Korean?" is not the best way to ask this question, rather, I would say "How long have you been learning Korean?" or "How long did it take you to learn Korean?".
I am forever resentful that my mom wanted to teach me Korean but was forced not to. Bilingual kids have superior abilities. I need to be perfect and fluent because I don't want native Korean speakers to even be able to tell.
i admire all these people so much! ive been trying to learn myself and always get side tracked lols.why do i do this to myself haha smh ,i need to get on top of it. good advice they have too.
원어민을 사귀어야 실제로 쓰는지 안 쓰는지 알 수 있어요.
예를 들어, 하이루, 방가방가, 지못미 이런 거 배워도 지금은 뭐...
그리고 원어민 중에서도 틀린 언어를 쓰는 사람들이 꽤 많아서 맞춤법 검사기 사용하는 것도 좋아요.
To be honest. I need motivation to continue Korean and need materials that actually interest me? do you have any tips for me ?
Let’s not also gloss over the fact that they can all speak English as well, English is not their first language. Pretty impressive.
can you make a video about forign doctor in south korea and how to become a doctor there ?
Korean may actually be one of the easiest Asian languages for English speakers to learn. First it is NOT tonal and seems to stress both vowels and consonants. Also the Hagul is alphabetic and not characters and reputedly very easy for anyone who knows the spoken language.
I recommend you visit 4 or 5 universities in Seoul randomly. And ask the same question to all PhD. foreign students. You will be surprised that 99% foreign PhD. and master students can't speak korean, even spending more than 6 years in Korea. 😅
❤❤❤❤
That's interesting. Maybe they are not smart enough although studying PhD.
@SnakePlantCollector coincidently, 99% PhD and Master students I know personally from India, Bangladesh and Pakistan they can't speak korean. But when these people go to Spain, South America, and Arabic countries, they get fluent in spainish, Arabic, etc within a year. Do you mean they get extra smartness after moving there?
@SnakePlantCollector My brother is working in Kuwait. He got fluent in Arabic without any language course within a year. But it's been 5 years in Korea, and I can't speak korean.... Do you think my brother is more smart and intelligent ? I can't even speak basic korean after 5 years, so I am not intelligent? The reason isn't like that, my dear. The reason is very shocking. You need to find the actual reason.
@sports_boy129 Actually, I don't need to find out. It just means you didn't learn or speak the language with other people often. Korean is not really a hard language to learn. The letters are more scientific developed than any other languages.
The first girl from Norway is a cutie. 🥰🥰
thank you jin for the video. i appreciate all the efforts you put in for the channel. also... i am really intrigued by this app hilokal .. but i am worried how much does it cost after the free trial lol
can anyone tell me how to study korean like websites and stuffs
대학원 다니시는 노르웨이분 발음이 그냥 네이티브 한국인.
6:31 the grammar is simple?? It's literally the most difficult thing cause it's so different from european langauges
Girtl at around 9:40pm, from France but she has what sounds like an australian accent in English.
Not at all, she sounds like she has a scandinavian accent, despite coming from France lol
I'm 31 I'm currently studying English. It's my first language
Good !
그런데 정작 마이크 들고있는 유튜버 분은 한국인이 아닌거 같은데요?
태국 또는 필리핀 사람 인거 같은데 한국말 잘하시네요.
한국인 아님? ㅋㅋㅋ먼소리야
웃기긴한데에서 이미 한국어 패치 완료!
I really wonder what is the real meaning of the term that is translated as 'burdening' in English.
최고의 방법 한국에서 애기때부터 자라면됨 ㅡ..ㅡㅋ 한국어밖에몬할수도있지만 ㅋ
난 영어 16년을 했는데도 해외 여행 가서 간단한 대화도 겨우 했는데..
인터뷰를 한국어로 진행하셔야됐는데 이런 주제로 영어로 이야기하는게 의미가 있나 싶었어요 🤔🤔🤔
I like to speak Korea
All off you you are saling .y vdio onle.i xspt koriya
Are you zaynabu
I wonder what made Ingrid come back to Korea AGAIN and why after going back home to Norway despite having lived for 3 years, long enough to know quite a bit about Korea.
I can read a passion in her with which she wants to achieve something.
"hang out with Korean people"
Me: living 2.687 miles away from Korea 🗿
North Korea?
@@ericsohn5084 Nope.
@@howareyou1999 thought you meant 2.7 miles, not 2700miles lol and why are you using miles instead of km lol
@@ericsohn5084 Well, here we use Miles more common intstead of Km. Lol
@@howareyou1999 wow that's crazy... miles system is so annoying despite myself living in the US
0:32 so, you said I can speak with naked Koreans in this app? Mayor pros ...
노르웨이, 이집트, 프랑스. 영어네이티브도 아닌데 영어는 기본이네.
Wow, the French girl has a nearly perfect English accent.
omg first girl from norway hehe same
When girls start speaking in Korean/Japanese their voices change-become softer, more feminine, more pleasant.
The girl in the yellow shirt looks like Marnie from Halloweentown haha cute.
Even as a foreigner living in Korea, learning Hangul doesn't improve your job outlook whatsoever. No matter how fluent one becomes, you are outwardly facing a foreigner and always will be. Even if you are equally fluent and higher skilled than a Korean applying for the same job, you are unlikely to be hired because of the added headache of paperwork, visas, and what not. If you want to become fluent to socialize and make friends, cool more power to ya. Just don't expect to learn Hangul and suddenly become more employable or earn more money.
3 months? alarm bells ringing.