Review Quiz : explorekorean.net/intermediate1-quiz4/ Review Note (text lessons) V/A-던: explorekorean.net/intermediate1-lesson8/ V/A-았/었던: explorekorean.net/intermediate1-lesson9/ ---------- Before you take this lesson, make sure you know what a modifier is and how it works differently for Verb and Adjective respectively. If you need help, you can take these lessons : Adjective's Modifier Form : explorekorean.net/beginner1-lesson8/ Verb's Modifier Form : explorekorean.net/beginner2-lesson12/ [time stamp] 00:00 Intro 01:07 V/A-던 52:12 V/A-았/었던 01:10:13 Quick Review 01:13:08 Outro
Thank you for your free lesson. I really appreciate your effort and how detailed your lessons are. I truly hope you’ll never stop making Korean lessons!! Best wishes from Germanyyy!:)
What I really like about these lessons is that I get a thorough explanation of something new, but since you keep the grammar and vocabulary examples at a similar learning level, and explain things so well, I get a fantastic review of things I've already learned and pick up some new vocabulary along the way. Thanks so much.
Thank you as always for the amazing lesson 선생님! This is a particularly confusing grammar point for me so I really needed this hahah I will definitely need to come back to rewatch this and review
Whenever I can't remember the usage of some of the essential Korean grammars (especially those grammars I don't know yet), your videos are my guide in remembering all of those. Because, your explanation is as clear as the crystal. Let's face it. Language proficiency takes time. Therefore, I, as a Korean language learner, should study more. I thank you, 비키 선생님 for providing such lessons here in RUclips. 다시 검사합니다! 🤗
던 + 았/었던 문법을 자세히 설명해 주셔서 정말 감사합니다! 질문 있는데요 There was an example used for adjectives that I was wondering if other forms of the translation are more or less natural and if word order would be odd. “Aren’t you that kind lady from yesterday?” In the video was “어제 그 친철하던 아주머니 아니에요/아니세요?“ Can ”그“ be moved? Or would this be less natural? 어제 친절하던 그 아주머니 아니에요? And would 친절하시던 아주머니 be excessively formal/less natural? 고맙습니다!
How are you, miss Vicky? I have missed so many of your videos. But one of my juniors got into Bachelor's degree for Korean language in college. I recommended your channel to her and she told me it helped her a lot. And, now she's in her final year and selected for a scholarship as an exchange student in South Korea. Thank you so much.🥰🥰
21:00 what if I'm talking with someone about my neighborhood and his flat is a rented flat, and in some moment of this conversation I'm telling a phrase that means my neighborhood is still living in this flat and it's not time yet to move out for him? Would the first meaning fit this expression? And almost the same with the second example. What if we r talking about rented clothes (maybe this is a wedding dress, or costume for some performance, etc.)? Someone asked me "can I take ur clothes?" And I answer, that I have one more event or it's just not that time for returning because I paid for clothes to wear until 12pm?🤔 Can it be the first meaning?
1. I would use 살던 if there's not much time left before he moves out, and 사는 if there's still quite some time left. 2. If I'm actually seeing you wearing those clothes and talking to you, I would use present tense, and say "밀리아나씨가 입고 있는 옷 돌려주세요."
The past tense is modal and not temporal then!? The two verbs forms remind me of Russian past tense: 읽은 ЧИТАТЬ (to read, imperfective) - 읽었던 ПРОЧИТАТЬ (to read, perfective).
Sorry about the late reply, Federico씨! The paid services are currently closed and I'm actually not planning to open it again. I do private tutoring, but the slots are currently full (I could fit in more classes but I'm afraid that would wear me out T^T). If you're still interested in private classes, you can drop me an email at missvicky@explorekorean.net and I'll reach out to you when there's a vancancy(?) :) thank you so much
Hi there. This is just my tip, but if you're a beginner, I recommend doing both. While you learn grammar you inevitably learn sentences, and you'll come across new words in a sentence every time. That way you get to learn new vocabs with some sort of context, so it'll be easy to remember the meaning and how it's actually used, much quicker than when you just memorize the word and meaning alone. You can also make a separate notebook or online flash cards (like quizlet or anki) and save all the words you encounter in your grammar lessons. It's even better if you include full sentences and highlight the words. If you can't make time to actively study them, even just briefly going through them and try pronouncing them in your spare time would be super helpful. If you're at intermediate level and finished all the beginner level grammar, I recommend placing more importance on comprehension skills, sentence making and vocabs. Of course there will still be more grammar points left to study (intermediate, advanced grammar) but now that you got a better hang of how Korean works in general, studying grammar itself wouldn't feel too difficult and you'll find it easier to study it by yourself with the help of the explanations provided online. This comment got unintentionally long 😅 I will try making a study tips video with more details. Thank u^^
@@KoreanwithMissVicky Thank you for the help. I was learning both side to side. The vocabs with index cards and the grammer with your videos. I asked the question because I realized how many words you actually need to understand a question and thought I should focus more on vocabs first. But I will continue to learn both at the same time because I am pretty far in grammer ( I am in Video 37 in your korean playlist).
Thanks for lesson... I don't fully understand it yet so I'll review this several times, however an over-simplified first impression that I noticed. That is, the actual sound of these verb endings sounds audibly intuitive (Especially when hearing you read these sentence examples). They all end with ㄴ and the sound of 던 really sounds like a harder stop to the verb and adding 았/었 sounds even stronger of a stop. It is almost like the way a musical instrument can accent or staccato a note. So for now, if I hear this hard stop sound, I'll think the verb has some kind deeper meaning than just the doing the action.... I'll just then need to review the finer points of these meanings again, with example sentences. The left overs sentence was a great example!
Review Quiz : explorekorean.net/intermediate1-quiz4/
Review Note (text lessons)
V/A-던: explorekorean.net/intermediate1-lesson8/
V/A-았/었던: explorekorean.net/intermediate1-lesson9/
----------
Before you take this lesson, make sure you know what a modifier is and how it works differently for Verb and Adjective respectively. If you need help, you can take these lessons :
Adjective's Modifier Form : explorekorean.net/beginner1-lesson8/
Verb's Modifier Form : explorekorean.net/beginner2-lesson12/
[time stamp]
00:00 Intro
01:07 V/A-던
52:12 V/A-았/었던
01:10:13 Quick Review
01:13:08 Outro
Thank you mam for providing lessons for free and not just lessons but providing us with such detailed content
Thank you for your free lesson. I really appreciate your effort and how detailed your lessons are. I truly hope you’ll never stop making Korean lessons!!
Best wishes from Germanyyy!:)
I won't 🥰 thank you for your supportive message!
What I really like about these lessons is that I get a thorough explanation of something new, but since you keep the grammar and vocabulary examples at a similar learning level, and explain things so well, I get a fantastic review of things I've already learned and pick up some new vocabulary along the way. Thanks so much.
Thank you as always for the amazing lesson 선생님! This is a particularly confusing grammar point for me so I really needed this hahah I will definitely need to come back to rewatch this and review
This such a difficult grammar poin for me. Thanks to your long and detail explanation.
Thank you so much for the lesson, Miss Vicky! I was just reviewing this topic once more and your lesson was a big help as always!
Amazing explanation. 감사합니다 😊
Thank you so much for the best of this complicated lesson! 대단히 감사합니다~
Yay a new lesson! 🎉
Omg i've been waiting for this!! Thanks for uploading. I'm super excited for your new videos, your truly the best teacher!
고맙습니다! More to come!♥
Whenever I can't remember the usage of some of the essential Korean grammars (especially those grammars I don't know yet), your videos are my guide in remembering all of those. Because, your explanation is as clear as the crystal. Let's face it. Language proficiency takes time. Therefore, I, as a Korean language learner, should study more. I thank you, 비키 선생님 for providing such lessons here in RUclips. 다시 검사합니다! 🤗
던 + 았/었던 문법을 자세히 설명해 주셔서 정말 감사합니다!
질문 있는데요
There was an example used for adjectives that I was wondering if other forms of the translation are more or less natural and if word order would be odd.
“Aren’t you that kind lady from yesterday?”
In the video was “어제 그 친철하던 아주머니 아니에요/아니세요?“
Can ”그“ be moved? Or would this be less natural?
어제 친절하던 그 아주머니 아니에요?
And would 친절하시던 아주머니 be excessively formal/less natural?
고맙습니다!
Thank you for preparing this lesson! I’ve been struggling to distinguish between these for a while
My pleasure! :)
tysm for doing these lessons! i've learnt so much from you!
Thank you for the awesome video~! Looking forward to your next video, 빅키샘!
재밌게 보고 갑니다 😊
재미있게 봐주셔서 감사합니다 토니씨 ^^
How are you, miss Vicky? I have missed so many of your videos. But one of my juniors got into Bachelor's degree for Korean language in college. I recommended your channel to her and she told me it helped her a lot. And, now she's in her final year and selected for a scholarship as an exchange student in South Korea.
Thank you so much.🥰🥰
Wow that's great news! Congratulations to your junior student :)
@@KoreanwithMissVicky it's all thanks to you. 감사합니다!🙇♀️
Miss Vicky, i'm illiterate in Korean, but math i get, you explain logic deductions perfectly 💯
the best teacher 😍😍😍
21:00 what if I'm talking with someone about my neighborhood and his flat is a rented flat, and in some moment of this conversation I'm telling a phrase that means my neighborhood is still living in this flat and it's not time yet to move out for him?
Would the first meaning fit this expression?
And almost the same with the second example.
What if we r talking about rented clothes (maybe this is a wedding dress, or costume for some performance, etc.)? Someone asked me "can I take ur clothes?" And I answer, that I have one more event or it's just not that time for returning because I paid for clothes to wear until 12pm?🤔 Can it be the first meaning?
1. I would use 살던 if there's not much time left before he moves out, and 사는 if there's still quite some time left.
2. If I'm actually seeing you wearing those clothes and talking to you, I would use present tense, and say "밀리아나씨가 입고 있는 옷 돌려주세요."
@@KoreanwithMissVicky thank you) 🤗
The past tense is modal and not temporal then!?
The two verbs forms remind me of Russian past tense:
읽은
ЧИТАТЬ (to read, imperfective) -
읽었던
ПРОЧИТАТЬ (to read, perfective).
thank you miss vicky 😀
Thanks Mam
Many lessons 해주세요 ~~~
Hi Vicky, is your discord server / tutoring still open?
Sorry about the late reply, Federico씨! The paid services are currently closed and I'm actually not planning to open it again. I do private tutoring, but the slots are currently full (I could fit in more classes but I'm afraid that would wear me out T^T). If you're still interested in private classes, you can drop me an email at missvicky@explorekorean.net and I'll reach out to you when there's a vancancy(?) :) thank you so much
I have a question to learning the korean language. Is is better to learn the vocabularies first or the grammer?
Hi there. This is just my tip, but if you're a beginner, I recommend doing both. While you learn grammar you inevitably learn sentences, and you'll come across new words in a sentence every time. That way you get to learn new vocabs with some sort of context, so it'll be easy to remember the meaning and how it's actually used, much quicker than when you just memorize the word and meaning alone. You can also make a separate notebook or online flash cards (like quizlet or anki) and save all the words you encounter in your grammar lessons. It's even better if you include full sentences and highlight the words. If you can't make time to actively study them, even just briefly going through them and try pronouncing them in your spare time would be super helpful.
If you're at intermediate level and finished all the beginner level grammar, I recommend placing more importance on comprehension skills, sentence making and vocabs. Of course there will still be more grammar points left to study (intermediate, advanced grammar) but now that you got a better hang of how Korean works in general, studying grammar itself wouldn't feel too difficult and you'll find it easier to study it by yourself with the help of the explanations provided online.
This comment got unintentionally long 😅 I will try making a study tips video with more details. Thank u^^
@@KoreanwithMissVicky Thank you for the help. I was learning both side to side. The vocabs with index cards and the grammer with your videos. I asked the question because I realized how many words you actually need to understand a question and thought I should focus more on vocabs first. But I will continue to learn both at the same time because I am pretty far in grammer ( I am in Video 37 in your korean playlist).
Hello teacher... How r u doing.. Hopefully good👍🙂🤗
네 😊 잘 지내고 있어요~ 안부 고마워요
Thanks for lesson... I don't fully understand it yet so I'll review this several times, however an over-simplified first impression that I noticed. That is, the actual sound of these verb endings sounds audibly intuitive (Especially when hearing you read these sentence examples). They all end with ㄴ and the sound of 던 really sounds like a harder stop to the verb and adding 았/었 sounds even stronger of a stop. It is almost like the way a musical instrument can accent or staccato a note. So for now, if I hear this hard stop sound, I'll think the verb has some kind deeper meaning than just the doing the action.... I'll just then need to review the finer points of these meanings again, with example sentences. The left overs sentence was a great example!
1st like...😅😅