Billy Go’s Beginner Korean Course | #95: Two Things at Once Part 2
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- Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
- In this lesson you’ll learn one more common form used to say “while.” This is the 다가 form. You’ll also learn the forms 기는 하다 and 기도 하다, which can be used to add emphasis to the verb in a sentence.
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예문들은 도움이 많이 됐어요. 감사합니다 선생님!
Another great lesson Billy :D ~ 95% done
I have a question about this 기는 하다 form you showed at the end - could I say it works similar to when in English we put DO before a verb to emphasize it?
like:
I like chess - 채스를 좋아해요
I DO like chess - 채스를 좋아하기는 해요
This is how I understood this form, but I could be wrong 🤷
Yes, you can think of it like that :)
@@GoBillyKorean omg my idea was aproved by teacher Billy, it made my day 😁
You said the 다가 form interrupts something so it never finishes. That mean in the sentence: 학교로 가다가 친구를 만났어요, I never arrived at school ever? (So maybe we talked and did something else so I never went to school in the end?). Or does 다가 interrupt something but only momentarily?
Yes, it means you met them on your way to school - before you arrived. It's like saying "I met a friend on my way to school." The sentence doesn't imply you arrived at school, but then the context of the rest of the conversation will clarify whether you did or didn't (or if it didn't matter).
@@GoBillyKorean 감사합니다~ :)
thhank youuu
For 다가 Is there any changes to the verbs stems ending with ㅂ and ㄹ (like 살다, 굽다,눕다)? Or any other stem changes for present tense. If not.. could i just think of this form as + 가 (at least for the present tense)
No changes :)
oh! thats so stupid of me! i learned how to say Elementary/Middle/High school a a while ago but only now realized that 중 also means in between
I'm trying to wrap my head around why it's described as adding "다가"to the stem as opposed to "가" to the infinitive/dictionary form. Is it wrong to think of it this way, or is there a reason?
The reason is there's also another conjugation (a different form) with the past tense stem and 다가, so it's not always just the dictionary form. But ultimately you get the same thing when using this specific form.
@@GoBillyKorean thanks Billy! This series is one of the greatest online resources out there for a Korean beginner.
Throwing this out there (and this is absolutely not a criticism of what you’ve done): if you put together a graded reader using the grammar and vocab from these lessons (similar to the FSI’s “Modern Written Arabic, for example), it would be an easy sell for me in conjunction with this course. For me personally (I’m what you might call an input-heavy learner), I’m not one for grammar exercises. I mention this as I suspect it would be pretty easy for you to do, and I don’t perceive there to be any good options on the market as of yet.
With that said, thanks for everything that you’ve done here!