Posted on 09/05/2013 10:24:15 AM PDT by Victoria Bingham
https://www.facebook.com/victoria.bingham.14?hc_location=timeline
Good morning.
Good morning! 61 and cloudy. Maybe it will rain today. The American Youth are not full of vim this morning.
The local representative of American Seniors is saying "Just give me the coffee and back away".
The American High School senior is lying in bed with his laptop, not yet dressed, looking rather like a Polynesian high school senior. What has been seen, cannot be unseen.
I finished reading “The Fellowship of the Ring” to the byos last night. It took about six months! Now we can start “The Two Towers,” which seems a little shorter and also has shorter, though more numerous, chapters.
Come on over, Bob. I have an espresso machine.
When I was a senior in high school, it only lasted a year.
A Capella choirs are my very favorite. The fact that this one is military and that it is singing a song that I associate very closely with 9/11 makes it all the more touching. Great job!
Gee. Do I need coffee after that?
Morning! 4 inches of snow! will post photo a bit later. Also got photos of some camp robbers(birds). Canadian Jays I think is their real name.
Later
Loves me them photos!
Our teachers today are Mr. Bing and Miss. Google
This is more about how it sounds than the Korean spelling (han-gul)
Who?
누구?
Nu-Gu or "Noo Goo"
누구입니다?
nu gu ib ni-da = Who is it?
Where?
어디?
eo-di or "ee-oh dee"
"ga-go sip-e-yo" = I want to go.
"eo-di ga-go sip-e-yo?" = Where do you want to go?
When?
언제? or "ee-on-jay"
"hae-sseo-yo" = You did it
"eon-je hae sseo-yo" = When did you do it?
eo-je means "yesterday"
o neul means "today"
nae-il means "tomorrow"
ji-geum (jee goom) means "now"
Stop/Quit/Don't
말다
mal da
When used in a simple sentence will often become just "ma" added to a particle plus a verb.
VERB STEM+ji ma-se-yo.
ga-ji ma-se-yo = don't go
ha-ji ma-se-yo = don't do it
sa-ji ma-se-yo = don't buy it
man-ji-ji ma-se-yo = son't touch it
ut-ji ma-se-yo = don't laugh
geok-jeong-ha-ji ma-se-yo = don't worry
CAN and CAN'T
ja-da "to sleep"
jal-su-eop-da = Cannot sleep
jal-su-it-da = Can sleep
jab da "to catch"
jab-eul su-eop-da = Cannot Catch
jab-eul su-it-da = Can Catch
Also Note:
못 mos+verb = cannot_____
(technically it means "never")
NOT
"An"
Add "an" before a verb to make a negative sentence
jib = house e is a particle that marks a location ga means "go" and yo is a particle that concludes a polite sentence.
jib-e ga-yo = "I'm going home"
jib-e an ga-yo = "I'm not going home"
How? 어떻게?
eo-tteo-ke
sounds like "ooh-da-kay?"
eol-ma? = How much?
eol-ma ye-yo? = How much is it?
eol-ma na-keo-yo = How big is it?
bump
I will be studying this throughout the day.
I never said “daily”
lol
Interesting verb conjugations.
yep.
Subject-Object-verb order is different than in English
My book is in the backpack.
in Korean its...
My book backpack is in.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.