How to Conjugate the 요 Form (Present, Past, Future) | Live Class Abridged

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  • Опубликовано: 28 окт 2019
  • This is an abridged version of the live stream from 7-21-2019 which covered how to conjugate the 요 form in present, past, and future tense. It also covers most exceptions with verbs that you might find.
    Want to start learning Korean? Check out my book, "Korean Made Simple" on Amazon: amzn.to/2bDBi6h (affiliate)
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    Music by Kevin MacLeod: "Beachfront Celebration," “MJS Strings,” and “Brightly Fancy.” (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 (creativecommons.org/licenses/b...)

Комментарии • 36

  • @shutdahellup69420
    @shutdahellup69420 4 года назад +5

    Freaking sweet potatoes, so many exceptions, my head hurts but i gotta push through 😵😭

  • @poppy5398
    @poppy5398 4 года назад +3

    I'm taking notes as I watch this, and the entire video took up 3 pages! This video has so much information in it! Thank you so much!

  • @mijcol3059
    @mijcol3059 3 года назад +1

    Thank you billy! I was panicking because of the irregularities but you explained it so well!🤍 thank you for your work

  • @knittingarch
    @knittingarch 4 года назад +5

    I already know this material, but I wanted to thank you for making these abridged lessons! Thoughtfulness is why I support you on Patreon :)

    • @GoBillyKorean
      @GoBillyKorean  4 года назад

      Thank you! I appreciate your support :D

  • @masterblack9400
    @masterblack9400 4 года назад +7

    I just finished the chapter in your first book that talks about this right when this video came out. Happy coincidence 👍

  • @silencio926
    @silencio926 4 года назад +2

    Incredible. I have learned so much from Billy over the past two years. Thank you for all your hard work.

  • @azzybC
    @azzybC 4 года назад +1

    I swear to god maybe it's just my brain being stupid, but you said the rule with "ㅎ" can't be explained in more simple way... but is actually the simplest for me to understand than all of the others ones.....

  • @theserline1
    @theserline1 4 года назад +4

    I just bought your book, i love your lessons! Thank u! ♡

    • @GoBillyKorean
      @GoBillyKorean  4 года назад +2

      Thanks for your support, and good luck in your studies~!

  • @Ruth-bc3lx
    @Ruth-bc3lx 4 года назад

    I have been confused about this a lot. Thanks for this video.

  • @kristenb3240
    @kristenb3240 4 года назад +1

    Thank you! I was confused about the verbs ending in 'ㅡ' and couldn't find clear information anywhere. Easy to understand. :)

  • @ayaahmed846
    @ayaahmed846 Год назад

    감사합니다 선생님❤️

  • @kekthemaster
    @kekthemaster 4 года назад +3

    Wow this was a really complete lesson. I just started learning Korean 1 month ago. Due to the quarentine, I can´t go outside so I´m studying Korean everyday. It´s really interesting and I appreciate your great effort teaching us. Keep going!

  • @peachboy222
    @peachboy222 4 года назад

    Thank you so much for this video! It helped a lot :)

  • @eugeniadonkor2837
    @eugeniadonkor2837 3 года назад

    Thank you so much Omgosh!!!

  • @ramyabounader7430
    @ramyabounader7430 4 года назад

    Thank you so much Billy! I have just found your channel and your videos help a lot! It would be interesting if you could make a video about the difference between 저는, 나는 and 내 please.

    • @GoBillyKorean
      @GoBillyKorean  4 года назад

      저 is for formal/polite speech and 나 is for casual/slang speech. I have several videos on my channel about the Topic Marker (the 는 part) on my channel too :)

    • @ramyabounader7430
      @ramyabounader7430 4 года назад +1

      @@GoBillyKorean Thanks I will check out your video :)

  • @thatredhead7481
    @thatredhead7481 4 года назад

    Hi

  • @unknownsoul1811
    @unknownsoul1811 4 года назад +2

    I was searching for the conjugation of です (japanese) the first video that appeared was how to conjugate 요 (Korean)
    I mean I'm also leaning Korean so it's great that I found your channel
    But like.... WTH?

    • @GoBillyKorean
      @GoBillyKorean  4 года назад +4

      me: "Let's learn Japanese!"
      youtube: "How about Korean instead?"

    • @unknownsoul1811
      @unknownsoul1811 4 года назад +1

      Learn Korean with GO! Billy Korean exactly 😂

  • @muhammadsarfraz6593
    @muhammadsarfraz6593 4 года назад

    Hi,
    Sarfraz here pakistan.
    Grammer for past event imagine?
    Korean grammer

  • @Eddie-bb9wf
    @Eddie-bb9wf 4 года назад

    I don’t believe reincarnation or Samsara, but you are the only reason that I started to believe it.
    You guys are watching
    21C version of King Sejong who is the 4th king of the Joseon dynasty and invented Korean alphabet in 1443.
    Anybody knows why I have been watching his videos even if I’m Korean?

    • @Eddie-bb9wf
      @Eddie-bb9wf 4 года назад

      Thank you very much Billy

    • @malabuu
      @malabuu 4 года назад

      Hmm... Maybe to find some prove that King Sejong used the Drangon Balls last, so that he could reincarnate as Billy to teach more people this beautiful language? ;)

  • @christinagrace5298
    @christinagrace5298 4 года назад

    So wait, I’m confused about descriptive verbs... aren’t they just... adjectives?

    • @GoBillyKorean
      @GoBillyKorean  4 года назад +1

      If you think about it in terms of English, adjectives are used directly before nouns as-is - the adjective "big" can just go before a noun like "car" and you get "big car." The reason they're called descriptive verbs is because you have to conjugate them (like verbs) in order to use them before nouns. 크다 "to be big" can't just be attached to 차 ("car") to become 크다 차 - that would mean like "it's big, car" and wouldn't be natural. You have to change the descriptive verb 크다 to 큰 - its present tense adjective form meaning "big" - to use it before a noun. So you'd get 큰 차 "big car." 큰 is an adjective because you can use it directly before a noun, but 크다 is a descriptive verb. Also note that you could've conjugated the descriptive verb 크다 differently than 큰 to use in other situations; this is just an example.

  • @thatredhead7481
    @thatredhead7481 4 года назад

    Forst

  • @thatredhead7481
    @thatredhead7481 4 года назад

    Lol first

  • @wanderingdoc5075
    @wanderingdoc5075 4 года назад

    Kids don't know nor memorize any of these conjugation rules, and they speak just fine. Just exposure?

    • @no-ze9ce
      @no-ze9ce 4 года назад +1

      Kids get a lot of trial and error practice and also learn slower. Some older people might want to speed up that learning stage?

    • @GoBillyKorean
      @GoBillyKorean  4 года назад +2

      You can learn all of these just through TONS of exposure, yes. But you can also just memorize these rules as a beginner and save a lot of your time.

    • @wanderingdoc5075
      @wanderingdoc5075 4 года назад +1

      @@no-ze9ce They learn slower, maybe. But their pronounciation is perfect and they don't have to stop and think of rules in their head during speaking, reading, or writing (which would be ridiculous). I don't think Billy does either at this point. Makes me wonder if it was just a lot of exposure at the end of the day.. just a hypothesis. I don't have any scientific proof either way.

  • @oo-fj7xn
    @oo-fj7xn 4 года назад

    선생님 감사합니다
    this is so confusing, you have to remember all the rules so many and hard to understand. Please add Arabic.