I always wondered why Korean teachers never used this method to teach double consonants, I also thought your 이/가 은/는 video was one of the best explanations for foreigners to learn. 영상을 만들어주셔서 감사합니다
@@davidkim_kr I've been looking through your videos since I wrote that and they all seem to be well thought out and good quality, so I have subscribed. 😊 I also want to say that your English is at a very high level, although one suggestion is 'for your information' can feel a little bit rude (sort of like ~잖아 feeling) some more softer and natural feeling words/phrases are 'However,', 'Keep in mind that', 'It's important to' I hope that my Korean will be the same level as your English someday
Wow… thank you for giving me a great correction about “FYI.” I really really appreciate with that🙏🙏🙏 I’ll try my best to improve my English skills, so let’s keep up the each other’s good work!!
@@davidkim_kr To be honest even as a native speaker I am not entirely sure why 'for your information' has that feeling, so it's not surprising that a learner wouldn't know 😅. It's a small mistake so I wondered if I should even write it, but then I thought if it was me I would also want to know. With that said, I was just watching your video about sentence patterns, to hear you have only learned English for a year and reached such a high level is incredible. I assumed you have been studying English for many years. Even though not explicitly about Korean, perhaps a good video idea is certain things you did while learning English that you noticed gave you huge benefit for other people to apply to their Korean? For example how you learnt and remembered new words, or maybe how you managed to make sentences in your head faster, or if you are still actively learning English, what methods you are currently using. I really hope your channel gets more attention.
Yes, I’m getting video ideas from my English learning experience. So glad it seems to work well so far.🤣 ‘However,’ even though I practiced English conversation for less than a year, I also learned a bit of English during my student-period in a grammar-focused way. (I don't think it was effective, though.😅) Anyway, the last few months have contributed to my current English skills by at least 90%. So, I'll keep uploading many good useful videos consistently! P.S. I’m still an active English learner!! I've still got a long long way to go!💪
This has helped me a lot. I’ve watched several videos on how to pronounce double consonants and none of them are as actionable as this video. I’ve been using voice to text to visually see when I am saying the correct word.
Oh thank you very much for these tips ! I wasn't sure about the 'ㅉ' sound, now I'll know how to do it properly. I really like your method and the way you explain things. Very helpful.
Omg, you are a genius! Though I did know how to pronounce, I always asked myself if I’m doing wrong and wanted to know the differences by words. Comparing it to English really helped me! Thank youuu
Thank you for the explanation. The more I learn about hangul, the more I discover that I should pronounce korean sounds in my mother tongue "moroccan" rather than in english. In Morocco, we have a very large set of sounds thanks to variety of languages we speak(arabic, tamazight, french, spanich)
I am a native english speaker. I'm finding it difficult to understand why the sound changes. The sound in Speak, Sppi is a 'pee' sound which then changes to a 'bee' sound in Ppi. I am happy to find your channel. I'm sure it will help me to learn Korean quickly and accurately. Thank you. 감사합니다
I don't think I pronounce English the way that you think that I do. Sadly. I love this in theory; in reality it didn't get me closer to pronouncing things correctly... I think I just need someone to actually explain what the anatomy is doing for each consonant. Doing it by ear isn't working because I can't actually hear the difference on some of them.
Hi I loved your video, do you have any easy ways to learn the Hangul? I’m looking for a simple yet effective way to easily know and pronounce the letters/characters in Hangul. Thank you 🙏🏾
Poderia fazer sobre alguns batchims? Tenho dificuldades em me aproximar nos sons "O" como no exemplo: 선생님 , na silaba "생", não consigo falar corretamente. Desde já agradeço. Seus vídeos são muito bons! 🤗😁 - Could you do about some batchims? I have difficulty approaching the "O" sounds, as in the example: 선생님, in the "생" syllable, I can't speak correctly. Thank you in advance. Your videos are very good! 🤗😁
Hi! I bought your book Korean Patterns 262 and I'm really finding it helpful. I have a question about Pattern 005: can I use that pattern to say I'm far from a place/location? For example, 저는 서울이랑은 거리가 멀어요 (I'm far from Seoul.)
✅The Secret of Korean Fluency (for Beginners) : th-cam.com/video/keeFelG646o/w-d-xo.html
I just purchased your book! Thank you for creating this ❤️🙏 hopefully I can teach English in korea in the future :)
Perfectly explained for me as a beginner of Korean language🙌 Thank you! Kind regards from Switzerland 🇨🇭
This is the first time I feel like I really understood how to pronounce ㅅ versus ㅆ -- thank you for the helpful video!!
Same for me!
I always wondered why Korean teachers never used this method to teach double consonants, I also thought your 이/가 은/는 video was one of the best explanations for foreigners to learn.
영상을 만들어주셔서 감사합니다
I’m sooo glad my videos are helpful to you🥹🥹🥹
@@davidkim_kr I've been looking through your videos since I wrote that and they all seem to be well thought out and good quality, so I have subscribed. 😊
I also want to say that your English is at a very high level, although one suggestion is 'for your information' can feel a little bit rude (sort of like ~잖아 feeling) some more softer and natural feeling words/phrases are 'However,', 'Keep in mind that', 'It's important to'
I hope that my Korean will be the same level as your English someday
Wow… thank you for giving me a great correction about “FYI.” I really really appreciate with that🙏🙏🙏 I’ll try my best to improve my English skills, so let’s keep up the each other’s good work!!
@@davidkim_kr To be honest even as a native speaker I am not entirely sure why 'for your information' has that feeling, so it's not surprising that a learner wouldn't know 😅. It's a small mistake so I wondered if I should even write it, but then I thought if it was me I would also want to know.
With that said, I was just watching your video about sentence patterns, to hear you have only learned English for a year and reached such a high level is incredible. I assumed you have been studying English for many years. Even though not explicitly about Korean, perhaps a good video idea is certain things you did while learning English that you noticed gave you huge benefit for other people to apply to their Korean? For example how you learnt and remembered new words, or maybe how you managed to make sentences in your head faster, or if you are still actively learning English, what methods you are currently using. I really hope your channel gets more attention.
Yes, I’m getting video ideas from my English learning experience. So glad it seems to work well so far.🤣
‘However,’ even though I practiced English conversation for less than a year, I also learned a bit of English during my student-period in a grammar-focused way. (I don't think it was effective, though.😅)
Anyway, the last few months have contributed to my current English skills by at least 90%. So, I'll keep uploading many good useful videos consistently!
P.S. I’m still an active English learner!! I've still got a long long way to go!💪
I wish I had seen this when first learning. Good practice to bookmark and come back to. Thank you!
It’s my pleasure!
Excellent. The most accurate yet simple explanation yet. You have a great ear. You are a linguistic musician. 정말 정말 고맙습니다.
Wow… linguistic musician… that’s really huge for me🥹🥹🥹
그 비디오는 진지히게 제일 설명이에요!! 정말 감사합니다! 👍♥️
wau, I'm a beginner and still struggling with the korean pronunciation. Thanks a lot for this explanation - the best one I could imagine!!! 고마워
Great technique and nicely described congrats for your great teaching!
Wow I was literally just thinking about how I needed a video with tips for double consonants yesterday and I randomly came across this video 😭
This has helped me a lot. I’ve watched several videos on how to pronounce double consonants and none of them are as actionable as this video.
I’ve been using voice to text to visually see when I am saying the correct word.
Oh thank you very much for these tips ! I wasn't sure about the 'ㅉ' sound, now I'll know how to do it properly. I really like your method and the way you explain things. Very helpful.
Omg, you are a genius! Though I did know how to pronounce, I always asked myself if I’m doing wrong and wanted to know the differences by words. Comparing it to English really helped me! Thank youuu
Very useful! Thank you, David.
Are you a god? T.T
I've been praying for an actual explanation. THANK YOU SO MUCH
Gomawogo love it 🥰
I’m learning vowels and consonants at the moment new to the Korean language, appreciated 👏🫶🙏
Really useful examples.
I can't thank you enough for your videos 💙 these tips are great! Keep it up, your channel is destined to grow A LOT 🙌🏼
Thank you! Very useful lesson!
You’re welcome!
Thank you so much! 🎉
Thank you this helped me a lot I didn't know how to pronounce it correctly. ❤
Thank you for the explanation. The more I learn about hangul, the more I discover that I should pronounce korean sounds in my mother tongue "moroccan" rather than in english. In Morocco, we have a very large set of sounds thanks to variety of languages we speak(arabic, tamazight, french, spanich)
To be honest this is exactly what I needed, thank you so much! 🙏☺️
Keep up with your great job!!!
감사합니다 선생님 ❤
선생님 만나서 진짜 기뻐요!! 설명은 진짜 완벽하시네요!!! 고생 많으셨습니다! 다음에 영상이 기대돼요!!
고마워요!! 다음 영상도 기대해주세요 ㅎㅎ
@@davidkim_kr 네, 기다릴게요!!!
@@davidkim_kr 우리 선생님 즐거운 한글날 보내세요! 세종대왕님 한글을 만들어 주셔서 감사드립니다!!
I am a native english speaker. I'm finding it difficult to understand why the sound changes. The sound in Speak, Sppi is a 'pee' sound which then changes to a 'bee' sound in Ppi. I am happy to find your channel. I'm sure it will help me to learn Korean quickly and accurately. Thank you. 감사합니다
This is awesome
I don't think I pronounce English the way that you think that I do. Sadly.
I love this in theory; in reality it didn't get me closer to pronouncing things correctly... I think I just need someone to actually explain what the anatomy is doing for each consonant. Doing it by ear isn't working because I can't actually hear the difference on some of them.
감사합니다 선생님🤍
شكراً لك 🤍
Hi I loved your video, do you have any easy ways to learn the Hangul? I’m looking for a simple yet effective way to easily know and pronounce the letters/characters in Hangul.
Thank you 🙏🏾
Wow, very helpful video. I wonder how on earth did you come up with the phrase “Cat jazz”?? 😂
I really tried to make it well thought-out🤣🤣🤣
Poderia fazer sobre alguns batchims?
Tenho dificuldades em me aproximar nos sons "O" como no exemplo: 선생님 , na silaba "생", não consigo falar corretamente. Desde já agradeço. Seus vídeos são muito bons! 🤗😁
- Could you do about some batchims?
I have difficulty approaching the "O" sounds, as in the example: 선생님, in the "생" syllable, I can't speak correctly. Thank you in advance. Your videos are very good! 🤗😁
I’ll take a note that in my topic list too!
@@davidkim_kr 감사합니다 🤩
Hi! I bought your book Korean Patterns 262 and I'm really finding it helpful. I have a question about Pattern 005: can I use that pattern to say I'm far from a place/location? For example, 저는 서울이랑은 거리가 멀어요 (I'm far from Seoul.)
You can use it when referring to both a place and a metaphor!
@@davidkim_kr thank you for replying so quickly! one more question: would i have to add 에 to location names? if yes, is it like 서울에이랑은?
@@UndeniablyBookNerdy Nope! 서울이랑은 is correct!
I must confess I'm stuck at the JJ sound. I can't hear the difference. Must have to do with my native language...