+Vyomesh Dua I agree with +Liquidcadmus. well.. you know, these days people speak English. If your business is related to Korea or you have a plan to visit Korea, learn it. If you want to learn Korean only to get some advantages in Asia, however, there could be other options.
+Art by Atlas I think it is because of the sunlight reflecting on the monitor screen, so Yoolim Ssi face it's getting more light from the front. Ooops! No disrespect intended. Ssi (Hangul: 씨, Hanja: 氏) is the most commonly used honorific used amongst people of approximately equal speech level. It is attached at the end of the full name, such as Kimcheolsu-ssi (김철수씨) or simply after the first name, Cheolsu-ssi (철수씨) if the speaker is more familiar with someone. Appending -ssi to the surname, for instance Kim-ssi (김씨), can be quite rude, as it indicates the speaker considers himself to be of a higher social status than the person he is speaking to. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_honorifics
Very good,thanks
OMG, is that Yoo Lim? She looks so pretty. She kinda looks like Park Boram. Thanks for the video.
will learning Korean help, I mean is it a usefull language in Asia or should I learn something else
for biusness it could be helpfull because there are so few people who spaek asian languages..so they need people
+Davina SOS I would have learnt Japanese or Chinese if they were easy but Korean is way easier so I chose it
+Vyomesh Dua actually Japanese is the easiest for speaking. but Korean is the easiest for reading and writing.
+Liquidcadmus exactly; the Korean script is the easiest with few characters and vowels and we combine them just like hindi ( my mother tongue )
+Vyomesh Dua I agree with +Liquidcadmus. well.. you know, these days people speak English. If your business is related to Korea or you have a plan to visit Korea, learn it. If you want to learn Korean only to get some advantages in Asia, however, there could be other options.
유림, did you make a mistake when you wrote 책이 because it has a bottom consonant so isn't it 가?
+Exo_bangtantrash haha 이 is used with 받침 and the opposite for 가 :)
Oh ok thank you!
ferygoodu
can somebody Explain me why does she use 이/가 instead of 는/은?...
+Uriel Gachuz Cortes no
+Uriel Gachuz Cortes no
+Uriel Gachuz Cortes 은/는 can also be used but there's a little difference in nuance...or meaning.
Wow! you look different, more radiant. Gracias por las lecciones.
seemile.com/
+banzailoco I noticed too--I'm thinking it's the hairstyle or something? :)
+Art by Atlas I think it is because of the sunlight reflecting on the monitor screen, so Yoolim Ssi face it's getting more light from the front.
Ooops! No disrespect intended.
Ssi (Hangul: 씨, Hanja: 氏) is the most commonly used honorific used amongst people of approximately equal speech level. It is attached at the end of the full name, such as Kimcheolsu-ssi (김철수씨) or simply after the first name, Cheolsu-ssi (철수씨) if the speaker is more familiar with someone. Appending -ssi to the surname, for instance Kim-ssi (김씨), can be quite rude, as it indicates the speaker considers himself to be of a higher social status than the person he is speaking to.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_honorifics
+banzailoco De nada jaja and I don't know why I look more radiant in this video haha.