Posts tagged Korean Language

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Once Upon a Time in Korea…

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I am using  Ku Kim-Marshall’s book Once Upon a Time in Korea to practice my Korean reading skills.  It is a collection of children’s stories that have fairly easy Korean vocabulary.  I am currently reading 혹 달린 할어버지 (The Old Man with a Lump)  Here is an excerpt:


옛날 어느 마을에 한 할아버지 살았습니다.  이 할아버지는  아주 착했습니다.  그런데 이 할아버지 턱 밑에는 혹이 하나 달려있었습니다.  세수할 때나, 또밥을 먹을 때 아주 불편했습니다.  그러나   할아버지는 혹을 떼어낼 수가 없었습니다.  그래서 할어버지는 언제나 슬펐습니다.

Once upon a time there was an old man who lived in a village.  This old man was very kind-hearted. But this old man had a lump that was attached to the bottom of his chin. When he washed his face and ate food he was very uncomfortable. But this old man could not remove the lump.Therefore this old man was very sad.


I also downloaded Talk to me in Korean‘s workbooks for level 1 20-25 and level 2 1-10. I did pretty well on them but had forgot some of the vocabulary that I had learned.

I also cracked open Sogang’s 2A and started to work on chapter one again. I have finished about half of this book but have forgotten a great deal of it.

Other Korean Language Activities:

  • Started sending messages to Korean friends on Facebook in Korean.  I should have been doing this a long time ago but always revert to English.
  • Working on a letter that I am going to send to my Father-in-law.  I will probably use Lang-8 and JJ to help check my work before I send it.

Word Champ

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Fellow Korean language enthusiast and blogger Amanda from Amanda Takes Off left a comment about learning vocabulary through WordChamp.com. I started an account last night and can already tell that this is going to be a great resource for studying Korean..

The main benefit of Word Champ will be gaining new vocabulary through flashcard drills.There are plenty of Korean word lists and I have created a few lists based on words that I have forgotten from the first couple of Sogang books. The only downfall to the Korean lists is that I have found very few with pronunciations added to the card.

I still am in the process of learning all the features and you can gain more features by becoming a member for $10 a year but I don’t know if it is worth it yet. I love the fact that it keeps up with your scores and let’s you know how many times you missed a word while going through the drills. And speaking of drills, you can practice your list in a number of ways.

  • Pronunciation
  • Reading Practice
  • Flashcard Review
  • Translation
  • Listening Comprehension
  • Dictation

I have been concentrating on flashcard review drills but have plans to go through all the different drills before I retire a batch of cards. I look forward to exploring the site more extensively and hope that it will be just one more way to study Korean effectively.

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July 3rd Random Vocab

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These are a combination of words from previous lessons that I have forgotten and words that popped up this week that I didn’t know.

I’m trying to not add to many words per week.  I have a habit of creating huge vocabulary lists and then never making it through them. I am trying to add about 50-100 a week to my flash cards.  I am also in the process of adding words from 2A to my list. I know that there are other language learners that read this blog. How many words are you learning a week?

꾸벅꾸벅-dozing off
과음하다-to drink to much
살이 빠지다-to lose weight
왕따-,loser/loner
암내-armpit smell
얻다-to acquire/obtain
노력-effort
동의-agreement
인정-admission
후회-regret
가난하다-to be poor
간단하다-to be simple/basic
강의하다-to lecture
고르다-to pick or choose
전쟁터-battlefield


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