The book I'm finishing up now is a grammar book with plenty of exercises :-) The Kickstarter project just closed a few days ago, but it'll be available for sale for others by June.
As is true, you mention that one shouldn't use "너" due to its impoliteness. But so what is the alternative? Could you please give example sentences - at least the one mentioned in this lesson - that reflect the politeness requirements that all 한국어 users face? I often have problems with 너 too, when I want to or have to address people directly..
Good question, but there's not a quick answer I can type in here. There are several ways to refer to another person, depending on who they are. But I have plans to make a full lesson about this in the near future :-)
Well, I didn't cover every single way, or the video might get a bit longer ;-) 마치 is an adverb used for similar phrases though (you'd use 마치 in combination with another "like" verb), so you're correct.
Thank you^_^have a happy new week^_^
What about 마찬가지? I have it in my notes as meaning the same as 같다 but more formal and usually written language.
thanks for the video
so what's the meaning of "geot gata" ? I thought that it means something like "to be like sth"
dude, I would buy a grammar book from you filled with excersizes
The book I'm finishing up now is a grammar book with plenty of exercises :-) The Kickstarter project just closed a few days ago, but it'll be available for sale for others by June.
As is true, you mention that one shouldn't use "너" due to its impoliteness. But so what is the alternative? Could you please give example sentences - at least the one mentioned in this lesson - that reflect the politeness requirements that all 한국어 users face? I often have problems with 너 too, when I want to or have to address people directly..
Good question, but there's not a quick answer I can type in here. There are several ways to refer to another person, depending on who they are. But I have plans to make a full lesson about this in the near future :-)
hey what about 마치? i thought that would mean "like" as well :o am i wrong?
great vids btw. :) i improved my korean a lot already.^^
Well, I didn't cover every single way, or the video might get a bit longer ;-) 마치 is an adverb used for similar phrases though (you'd use 마치 in combination with another "like" verb), so you're correct.
Korean... why you so various. X"D
thx for explaining. :)
Hello a good teacher... what's the difference between 똑같아 and 비슷해요?
똑같다 means "to be the same" or "to be identical," and 비슷하다 means "to be similar."
@@GoBillyKorean 정말 감사합니다
@@GoBillyKorean I'm from Indonesia, I always like your video. You and Keykat are so nice.
Pls start making all you examples in polite Korean
Just add 요
if you can't form your own polite sentences by now (well basically by then) then i suggest you go back before advancing...
LMAO