0:03 V/A + 시/으시 0:19 Difference between V/A + 시/으시 and V/A + ㅂ니다/습니다 6:15 V/A + 세요 / 으세요 6:45 Honorific verbs 7:49 여쭈다 and 드리다 verbs 9:13 N + 시/이시 10:11 Honorific nouns 10:28 씨 and ~님
@haileyquinn25323 жыл бұрын
omg now I can finally understand this T^T Thank you so so much!!! Your way of teaching is so clear & easy to understand. Really appreciate the way you list down all the different verbs & show how to conjugate them into different tenses with this grammar. THat is life-saving!
@KOREANFULLCOURSE3 жыл бұрын
I am very happy to hear that! 😊 Thank you too! ^^
@tiffanie50123 жыл бұрын
I was so confused before because I couldn't understand properly the differences between honorific particles and the polite formal ending, but now it's all clear. I need pratice of course to really now how to use it, but now I will not do any confusion between those two grammar rules thank you :)
@KOREANFULLCOURSE3 жыл бұрын
티파니 씨, 안녕하세요^^ I am happy to hear that! :) You are learning with the Light speed 👍
@Vallyy773 жыл бұрын
Grazie! Ho finalmente sbloccato le mie difficoltà sugli "onorifici" e relativi coniugazioni. Sono un'italiana che sta studiando il coreano tramite la lingua inglese, ma a volte ho difficoltà a capire la mia insegnante dell'università. Con questa lezione di neanche mezz'ora di durata, sono riuscita a capire, ciò che in 2 ore di lezione la mia insegnante non è riuscita. 감사합니다 감사합니다 감사합니다 🙏🙏🙏
@KOREANFULLCOURSE3 жыл бұрын
Grazie molte, Valeria^^
@Niya_893 жыл бұрын
오 와 😃 So intense, but > 너무너무 감사해요🤗. Taking notes.
@KOREANFULLCOURSE3 жыл бұрын
Hi, Niarcher 씨^^ Yeah, I try to put lots of information in one video not to waste people's time :) These honorific things are important. Koreans use them all the time. So, for homework, you can pick a list of verbs and adjectives from previous lessons, and conjugate them in honorific form :)
@@Niya_89 안녕하세요^^ A Rule says: Stem + 시 or 으시. So, 오 + 십니다 = 오십니다 B 배우 + 십니다 = 배우십니다 C ✓ D ✓ E All verbs / adjectives whose stem ends with ㄹ are conjugated in a different way under certain conditions. When ㄹ is followed by ㅡ, ㄹ drops. 울다 - 우십니다, 우세요. // 팔다 - 파십니다 - 파세요 // 살다 - 사십니다 - 사세요 and so on. F ✓ G ✓ H ✓ I ✓ J ✓ K ✓ M ✓ N ✓ O ✓ P ✓ Q ✓ R ✓ S ✓ T ✓ U 하다 - 하십니다 - 하셨습니다 - 하시겠습니다 - 하세요 공부하다 - 공부하십니다 - 공부하셨습니다 - 공부하시겠습니다 - 공부하세요 아주 잘 했어요! [very well done!] :)
@Niya_893 жыл бұрын
@@KOREANFULLCOURSE 감사합니다 🤗 이해했어요 will practice some more words.
@Raspberriesste3 жыл бұрын
감사합니다
@nammiiahmed Жыл бұрын
at 6:01 is the future tense part for negative sentences, is the positive part, correct? I think that is present tenses positive way, am I right? I am confused...
@Knightfire66 Жыл бұрын
its called "honorific partciles" but its the same like conjugation. in the west to be polite you "pretend" like the person in front of you is "plural". so you conjugate it like plural. thats an other way of beeing polite. japan and korea say "honorific" to it. buts its clearly very similar to conjugation of verbs
@cheskhen9789 Жыл бұрын
❤❤❤❤
@jessela9278 Жыл бұрын
hi, i just wanna ask about tbe exceptions part, to eat & to drink -> 드시다. can u tell me why they both become the same 드시다? thank you 😊
@KOREANFULLCOURSE Жыл бұрын
Hello Jessela^^ Frankly speaking, I have no idea why both 먹다 and 마시다 have the same honorific version (드시다) 🙈