Week3:
We had to remember vocabulary that Evelyn sent to us. 저: I (formal)
나: I (informal). 너: you (informal). 우리: we 이것: this (thing)
저것: that (thing) 그것: that (thing) 이름: name 오늘: today
내일: tomorrow 학생: student 선생님: teacher 일본: Japan
중국: China 한국: Korea 네: Yes 아니요: No. 사람: Person
And in the class, we also learned about how to count in Korean. There are two number systems in Korean. One is native and one is Sino. Sino Korean is called China System too. It is 일(1),이(2),삼(3), 사(4),오(5),육(6),칠(7),팔(8),구(9),십(10),백(100). And then Native Korean System sounds really different from Sino Korean.
1: 하나
2: 둘
3: 셋
4: 넷
5: 다섯
6: 여섯
7: 일곱
8: 여덟
9: 아홉
10: 열
100: 백
Week4:
We reviewed Korean number systems and learned more about how to actually use them in our daily life. Sino Korean are used for dates, money, time(minutes), addresses and numbers above 100. For example, January is 일월, February is 이월 , March is 삼월 when 월 means months. Compared with Sino-Korean, Native Korean system are used for time(hours),age and counting. For instance, 2:20 is written as 두시 이십분. And we also learned how to say phone number and people’s age and birthday in Korean.
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