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epfks · 1 year
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BTS Album Masterlist
PROOF
Yet To Come
Run BTS 달려라 방탄
For Youth
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BE
01 Life Goes On
02 내 방을 여행하는 법 Fly To My Room
03 Blue & Gray
05 잠시 Telepathy
06 병 Dis-ease
07 Stay
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MAP OF THE SOUL: 7
6 Interlude: Shadow | 1 | 2 | 3 |
7 Black Swan | 1 | 2 |
8 Filter
9 시차 (My Time)
10 Louder than Bombs
11 ON
12 UGH! 욱!
13 00:00 (Zero O’Clock)
14 Inner Child
15 친구 (Friends)
16 Moon
17 Respect
18 We are Bulletproof: the Eternal
19 Outro: Ego | 1 | 2 |
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MAP OF THE SOUL: PERSONA
1 Intro: Persona
2 작은 것들을 위한 시 (Boy with Luv) feat. Halsey
3 소우주 (Mikrokosmos)
4 Make it Right
5 HOME | 1 | 2 |
6 Jamais Vu
7 Dionysus
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LOVE YOURSELF 結 ANSWER
1 Euphoria
2 Trivia 起: Just Dance
3 Serendipity | 1 | 2 | 3 |
6 Trivia 承: Love | 1 | 2 |
11 Trivia 轉: Seesaw
13 Epiphany | 1 | text from MV | 2 |
14 I’m Fine | 1 | 2 |
15 IDOL | 1 | 2 |
16 Answer: Love Myself | 1 | 2 |
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LOVE YOURSELF 轉 TEAR
1 Singularity | 1 | 2 |
2 Fake Love | 1 | 2 |
3 전하지 못한 진심 (The Truth Untold) | 1 | 2 |
4 134340 (Pluto)
5 낙원 (Paradise) | 1 | 2 |
6 Love Maze
7 Magic Shop | 1 | 2 |
8 Airplane pt.2 | 1 | 2 |
9 Anpanman
10 So What | 1 | 2 |
11 Outro: Tear | RM | SUGA | J-Hope |
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LOVE YOURSELF 承 HER
1 Serendipity | 1 | 2 | 3 |
2 DNA | 1 | 2 | 3 |
5 Pied Piper | 1 | 2 | 3 |
7 MIC Drop  | 1 | 2 | 3 |
9 Outro: Her
11 바다 (Sea) | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
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WINGS / YOU NEVER WALK ALONE
1 Intro : Boy Meets Evil
2 피 딴 눈물 (Blood Sweat & Tears)
3 Begin
4 Lie
5 Stigma | 1 | 2 |
6 First Love
7 Reflection
8 MAMA
9 Awake
10 Lost | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
11 Cypher 4 | RM | J-Hope | SUGA |
12 Am I Wrong | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
13 21세기 소녀 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
14 둘! 셋! (그래도 좋은 날이 더 많기를) | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
15 봄날 (Spring Day) | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |
16 Not Today | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
17 Outro: Wings | 1 | 2 | 3 |
18 A Supplementary Story : You Never Walk Alone | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
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THE MOST BEAUTIFUL MOMENT IN LIFE 화양연화
1 Intro: 화양연화 (The Most Beautiful Moment in Life)
2 I Need U
3 잡아줘 (Hold Me Tight)
5 Dope | 1 | 2 | 3 |
6 흥탄소년단 (Boyz with Fun)
7 Converse High
8 이사 (Moving On)
9 Love Is Not Over
1 Nevermind | 1 | 2 |
2 Run | 1 | 2 | 3 |
3 Butterfly | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
4 Whalien 52 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
5 Ma City
6 뱁새 (Silver Spoon) | 1 | 2 |
8 고엽 (Autumn Leaves)
9 House of Cards
+ 불타오르네 (Fire)
+ Save Me
+ Epilogue: Young Forever
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DARK & WILD
2 Danger
3 호르몬 전쟁 (War of Hormone)
4 힙합성애자 (Hip Hop Phile)
5 Let Me Know | 1 | 2 |
6 Rain | 1 | 2 | 3 |
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SKOOL LUV AFFAIR
2 Boy in Luv | 1 | 2 | 3 |
4 어디에서 왔는지 (Where You From)
5 하루만 (Just One Day)
6 Tomorrow | 1 | 2 | 3 |
8 등골 브레이커 (Spine Breaker) | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
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O!RUL8,2?
2 N.O
8 진격의 방탄 (Attack on Bangtan)
9 팔도강산 (Satoori rap)
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2 COOL 4 SKOOL
1 Intro: 2 Cool 4 Skool
2 We Are Bulletproof Pt.2
4 No More Dream
6 좋아요
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epfks · 3 years
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Hey did you know I keep a google drive folder with linguistics and language books  that I try to update regularly 
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epfks · 3 years
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dropbox containing linguistics textbooks
contains 34 textbooks including etymology, language acquisition, morphology, phonetics/phonology, psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics, & translation studies
dropbox containing language textbooks
contains 86 language textbooks including ASL, Arabic, (Mandarin) Chinese, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Farsi, French, German, Greek, Hebrew (Modern & Ancient), Hindi, Hungarian, Icelandic, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Latin, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Punjabi, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovene, Spanish, Swahili, Swedish, Tagalog, Thai, Turkish, Urdu, Vietnamese, Welsh
dropbox containing books about language learning
includes fluent forever by gabriel wyner, how to learn any language by barry farber, polyglot by kató lomb
if there’s a problem with any of the textbooks or if you want to request materials for a specific language feel free to message me!
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epfks · 3 years
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Children's Books in Korean
I have uploaded my small collection of Korean children’s books in PDF form. Since I am just learning Korean I summarized a few of them based on the pictures, so please excuse some of the titles!  There are 4 types of PDF’s in each folder, full color editions of the book with pictures (title.pdf) or just the text of the book (titletext.pdf). There are also black and white editions for those who want to print them off to write on them for translating. I’ve also included a zip file for those who want all 4 files. 
Categorized based on difficulty** : 
Beginner
Bear Adventure
Counting Monkeys 
Cow carries a rice bag
Kids and the Storm
Wheat Kids
Intermediate
Heidi
The Nutcracker
The Prince and the Pauper
Advanced(ish)
Pelé - (It’s a short biography)
Hope that these books will encourage and help those who are starting to learn Korean! 화이팅!!!!! **…in the realm of children’s books but I could totally be wrong!
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epfks · 3 years
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Salut! I love your blog and I've learned a lot about French from it! If you have time, do you have any advice or tips on how to write a formal thank you letter in French? For example, greetings, endings, etc. In this case, I would like to thank someone for writing me a recommendation letter. Thank you so much (or merci beaucoup)!
Hello,
Thank you!
When it comes to greetings and endings, the most common thing is to open with Monsieur/Madame (no Cher/Chère, because you don’t know them, and not Monsieur X, because they know their own names), and end with En vous remerciant par avance, je vous prie d’agréer, Monsieur/Madame, mes salutations distinguées.
Which is bootlicking at its best, but that’s how we do it.
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Hope this helps! x
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epfks · 4 years
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How to improve pronunciation
Salut! How would you recommend someone to improve their pronunciation in French if they don’t have access to a class/live in the country where French is spoken? I’m trying so hard but I struggle a lot with pronunciation but it’s so so important to me to be able to pronounce words properly and speak well because I love this language so much and it’s very important to me but I’m struggling a lot
You don’t have to live somewhere in particular or go to school to get any kind of skill. Practice and hard work will always be enough. Now :
Study this post about phonetics
Study this post about pronunciation
Listen to audiobooks while reading the written version (see below) 
Watch subtitled stuff (Netflix, TED talks, hacked content, TV5 Monde’s Sept jours sur la planète, Public sénat)
Speak to yourself, pretend to be a Youtuber, debate out loud (…) and record it so you can listen to it later
Some resources :
Youtube’s pronunciation channels
The website Forbo (natives pronouncing words)
The website Reverso (translation, pronunciation, context)
The website Linguo.tv (french videos + subtitles)
Phonetic transcription
Audiobook/ebook combo :
Le Petit Prince - Saint Exupéry AU / EB 
1984 - George Orwell AU / EB 
The Alchemist - Paulo Coehlo AU / EB 
The Art of War - Sun Tzu AU / EB
The Call of Cthulhu - Lovecraft AU / EB 
Alice in Wonderland - Lewis Caroll AU / EB 
L’Île mystérieuse - Jules Verne AU / EB 
The Bible AU / EB 
The Fellowship of the ring - J.R.R. Tolkien AU / EB 
Pride and prejudice - Jane Austen AU / EB 
Le Horla - Maupassant AU / EB 
Candide - Voltaire AU / EB 
The Black Cat - Edgar Allan Poe AU / EB 
Dorian Gray - Oscar Wilde AU / EB 
Hope this helps! x 
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epfks · 4 years
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Korean Reading Practice - 동화로 배우는 한국어 제2단원 제1과 - 금덩이보다 소중한 것
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epfks · 4 years
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Korean Masterlist:
FROMIRELANDTOKOREA’S LESSON MASTERLIST
Seeing as I have a masterlist for ALL of my posts, including resources, books, etc (find it here) I wanted an organised lesson one! I hope this will help everyone! Updated: 10 March 2020
HANGUL/READING:
Lesson 1: Hangul Basic Consonants Pt.1 Lesson 2: Hangul Basic Consonants Pt.2 Lesson 3: Hangul Basic Consonants  Lesson 4: Diphthongs Lesson 5: Aspirated and Double Consonants Lesson 6: Batchim Pt.1  Lesson 22: Batchim Pt. 2 NEED TO KNOW:
Lesson 17: How Korean Age Works Lesson 18: Levels of Politeness in Korean Lesson 105: Korean Holiday Chuseok
VOCABULARY:
Lesson 7: Hello, Thank You, Goodbye, Yes and No Lesson 8: I’m Sorry Lesson 9: Please, More, a Little Lesson 14: Native Korean Numbers and Uses Lesson 16: Sino-Korean Numbers and Uses Lesson 19: Days of the Week Lesson 20: Months Lesson 21: Body Parts Lesson 23: School Subjects Lesson 24: School Vocabulary Lesson 25: Family Lesson 42: Today, Tomorrow, Now etc. Lesson 58: Vegetables Lesson 59: Fruit Lesson 60: Emotions Lesson 61: Food and Drink Lesson 68: Sports Lesson 69: Places in Town Lesson 79: Animals  Lesson 80: Clothes  Lesson 84: Sickness Pt. 1 Lesson 85: Sickness Pt. 2 Lesson 86: Sickness Pt. 3 Lesson 93: Transportation Lesson 94: Halloween  Lesson 102: The House Lesson 103: Shopping Lesson 106: Dating, Love, Marriage Lesson 107: Random Vocabulary GRAMMAR: Lesson 10: It Is, What is It? Lesson 12: This Is, What is This? Lesson 13: This, That, It, Thing Lesson 26: Have/Don’t Have Lesson 17: 15 Useful Verbs Lesson 27: Present Tense Conjugation Lesson 28: Past Tense Conjugation Lesson 29-32: Future Tense 1 2 3 4 Future Tense Meanings and Examples 1 2 3 4 Lesson 33: How to Form Korean Sentences Lesson 34: Don’t + Verb Lesson 35: Topic/Subject Marking Particles ~은/는 + ~이/가 Lesson 36: Topic/Subject Marking Particles ~은/는 + ~이/가 Pt 2 Lesson 37: Object Marking Particle ~을/를 Lesson 38: Want To -고 싶어요 Lesson 39: Location Marking Particles ~어디, ~에, ~에서 Lesson 40: Negative Sentences Lesson 41: Negative Sentences with 하다 Lesson 43: Who? Lesson 44: Why, How, How much? Lesson 45: From - To - , From - Until - Lesson 46: Therefore, So Lesson 47:  And, With ~하고, ~(이)랑 Lesson 48:  But, However, ~그렇지만, ~그런데 Lesson 49:  To/From Someone Lesson 50: Plural Nouns Lesson 51: Telling Time Lesson 53: -지 마세요 (지마) Lesson 54: -(으)세요 Imperative Lesson 55: -아/어/여 주세요 Lesson 56: -도 Too, Also, As Well Lesson 57: -만 Only Lesson 62: Can, Cannot - (으)ㄹ 수 있다/없다 Lesson 63: Present/Past/Future Progressive Lesson 64: A bit, Really, Very, Not really, Not at all Lesson 65: Changing Nouns into Verbs -는 것  Lesson 66: Counters 개 + 명 Lesson 67: To Be Good/Bad At Lesson 70: Have to, Should, Must Lesson 71: Still, Not Yet Lesson 72: Already Lesson 73: (으)로 Lesson 74: If, In Case Lesson 75: Let’s Lesson 76: Pronouns + Possessive Pronouns Lesson 77:ㄹ/을 것: Lesson 78: Doable/Worth Doing Lesson 81: (으)ㅂ시다 Lesson 82: 처럼 Like Lesson 83: More….Than Lesson 87: 좋다 vs 좋아하다 Lesson 88: -ㄴ가 Lesson 89: 다, 더 - All, More Lesson 90: Behind, In Front of, Beside Lesson 91: Written Descriptive Form Adjectives Lesson 92: Before -ing Lesson 95: To be Similar to/The Same as -같다 Lesson 96: To Care/Not Care Pt.1 Lesson 97: To Care/Not Care Pt.2 Lesson 98: Connecting Verbs Lesson 99: Might, Perhaps, It’s Possible Lesson 100: To Want 원하다 Lesson 101: Korean Conjunctions Lesson 104: From A to B Lesson 108: Narrative Tense Lesson 109:  -지/-죠 Lesson 110:  -니 Lesson: 111: -ㅂ/습니까  Lesson 113: Shall I? Lesson 114: Agreeing/Disagreeing
PHRASES:
Lesson 11: Where Are You From? I’m From Lesson 52: Self Introduction  Lesson 112: Travelling Phrases Pt 1
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epfks · 4 years
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Grammar Masterlist
Here are all of the French grammar post I have made so far:
Les pronoms objets
How to form sentences in French
La conjugaison des verbes réguliers
L’utilisation du gérondif
Subjonctif in relative clauses
Subordonné complétive
leur vs leurs
Tout/tous/toute/toutes
Les articles partitifs
Quelquefois ou quelque fois
Les pronoms 
Le discours indirect
Other methods to express conditions
si-phrases
Subjonctif
Subjonctif: avoir
Subjonctif: être
en ce moment vs à ce moment
Adverbs
Les structures du verbe
Peut-être
Compléments de nom
passer avec avoir et être
venir de +Inf
finir de vs finir par
Parce que ou car?
Y ou en?
Conditionnel
Vocab masterlist /Song translation masterlist/ Expressions masterlist
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epfks · 4 years
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Level 9 / Lesson 4: -았/었던
안녕 여러분! Welcome to this next Level 9 lesson! We’re going to learn about a structure that I got an ask about the other day, and it’s actually kind of a useful structure so I thought I’d make a full lesson on it! 시작해 볼까요?
First, let’s get a formula down:
[verb / adjective stem] + 았/었던 + [noun]  
Attach -았던 to stems whose last vowel isㅏ or ㅗ
Attach -었던 to stems whose last vowel is anything but ㅏ or ㅗ
Okay, let’s talk about its usage now! Essentially, -았/었던 is another way to describe nouns with verbs in the past tense. It’s pretty similar to attaching -ㄴ/은 to a verb stem, but it’s a little different. Let’s see how!
Using -았/었던
Let’s look at two sentences:
지난 주에 본 영화 다시 보고 싶어요. = I want to see the movie that I saw last week again.
지난 주에 봤던 영화 다시 보고 싶어요. = I want to see the movie that I saw last week again.
The first one uses -ㄴ/은 to mean “movie that I saw.” This is just the plain past tense way of describing a noun with an adjective. The second one, on the other hand, uses -았/었던 to do this. This gives the nuance that you already finished the movie and no longer are watching it, hence why you want to watch it again. Perhaps with the first sentence, maybe you fell asleep halfway through the movie and didn’t finish it and thus would like to. But with the second one, -았/었던 implies that you’ve finished the movie already. Hope that makes sense!!
You can also use these for adjectives (there are some examples below) to imply that while something was once [adjective], it no longer is.
Let’s see some more examples!!
제가 했던 숙제를 선생님한테 줬어요. = I gave the homework I did to the teacher.
Implies that you completely finished the homework.
어렸을 때 많이 읽었던 책은 낸시 드류라고 했어요. = The books I read a lot when I was young were called Nancy Drew.
You finished reading the entire Nancy Drew series and no longer do.
기가 작았던 남자아이 갑자기 커졌어요. = The boy that was short suddenly grew.
The boy is no longer short, so you can use -았/었던.
뉴욕시에서 코로나바이러스때문에 바빴던 거리가 이제는 텅 비어요. = Due to the coronavirus, the once-busy streets are now empty in New York City. 
The streets are empty compared to how they once were.
Using Just -던
It is indeed possible to only add -던 to verb stems (not so much adjective stems as this sounds unnatural according to howtostudykorean.com). Let’s see an example to demonstrate the difference between these two methods:
지난 주에 봤던 영화 다시 보고 싶어요. = I want to see the movie that I saw last week again.
어렸을 때 보던 영화 보고 싶어요. = I want to see the movie that I used to watch when I was young. 
I think the distinction between these two is pretty clear – the first one suggests an action that you completed in the past. The second one, just using -던, implies that you used to do something repeatedly. The first one just kind of means that you did it once and got it over with. Here’s another one:
(from koreantopic.com) 아까 보던 신문을 여기에 두었는데 혹시 못 보셨어요? = I put the newspapers I was reading earlier here, did you see it?
Here, -던 has a different usage. It implies that you were doing something in the past but have not yet completed it. In this example, you were reading the paper earlier but didn’t finish it, hence why you’re looking for it now. The action may not have ended in the past unlike with -았/었던. 
To Summarize
Here’s a chart that I hope summarizes this lesson well!
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That’s about it for this lesson!! Hope it helped!
If you want to practice writing and reading Korean with others, join my Discord chat here and my Tumblr chat here! Don’t forget to follow my Instagram @apopofkorean too!
Want to expand your Korean vocabulary and get closer to fluency? Get Drops Premium using my affiliate link!
If you would like to donate and support my studies, check out my Ko-Fi! Thank you for your generosity! See you next time! 다음에 봐요!
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epfks · 4 years
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(으)려고
in order to , with the intention to
밖에 일찍 나가려고 숙제를 빨리 했어요
i did my homework fast in order to go out early
그 뜻을 이해하려고 책을 두 번 읽었어요
i read the book twice in order to understand the meaning
you can use (으)려고 at the end of sentences to indicate you're just about to do something. it is usually used in response to a question
마트에 갔어요?
did you go to the store?
아니요, 지금 가려고요
no but i'm just about to go
(으)려고 노력하다
to try to..
노력하다 means to try, to put effort in something
한국어를 배우려고 노력하고 있어요
i'm trying to learn korean
그 친구를 매 주말 만나려고 노력해요
i try to meet this friend every weekend
(으)러
to go/come to a place in order to do something
친구를 만나러 왔어
i came to meet a friend
공부하러 학교에 가고 있어 
i’m going to school to study
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epfks · 4 years
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hello! I'm just starting out learning korean, and I'm a little confused about how the speech levels work. so I understand there's 존댓말 and 반말 but search results show there are seven speech levels of politeness and formality and it's a little confusing. do you maybe have any links to better understand which to use when, etc? thank u in advance!!
Hello! I do have some clues as to how you can figure out the levels for yourself and I will link the resources that you can check out down below! 
For starters, you’re right; there are seven different levels of politeness / formality in Korean. You’re also right in saying that it is confusing! Generally, with beginners, it’s better to know what’s considered “formal” just by looking at the conjugation. For example, we can assume that something with “-ㅂ/습니다” at the end of the verb is considered formal. This is one of the highest levels of formalities. Or something without any formality marker (ie. lack of -요), we can assume it’s the lowest level of formalities. Below is a list of the formalities, and when to use them:
하소서체 ♡ Most formal speech to show the most respect ♡ Used to address royal family members ♡ Also often used in the Bible / scripture 
합쇼체 ♡ Respectful / polite form of speech ♡ Used for elders, strangers, customers, or in business settings ♡ Used for unbiased attitude
하오체 ♡ Outdated formal speech (usually in historical [사극] Korean dramas) ♡ Same rank or lower
하게체 ♡ Also relatively outdated but not uncommon ♡ Can be used by middle-aged adults to other adults (usually lower socially) ♡ Can be used by higher-ranked ppl on social ladder talking to people lower than them (Ex. CEO talking to a lower-level employee) 
해라체 ♡ Formal speech used for the same level or lower ♡ Even though there’s no added respect, it’s not considered disrespectful if you use it appropriately ♡ It’s not as common as 합쇼체, 해요체, 해체 though it’s still used frequently ♡ Necessary to know this level though as it’s used to quote people ♡ Also known as “plain form”
해요체 ♡ Informal but still polite speech ♡ This is the most common and natural speaking level in Korea ♡ 고마워요 // 안녕하세요 // 아니요 ♡ Regardless of relative rank, this level can be used politely and respectfully
해체 ♡ The most informal / casual speech level
Here are examples of the formalities using the verb “사랑하다” - to love:
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Even though 해라체 and 해체 are both considered “반말”, 해라체 is considered more formal (remember, “plain form”)
Next, how to use them is a little bit more difficult. I will link resources with each formality (with examples) so you can check it out for your own convenience as well:
하소서체
합쇼체
하오제
하게체
해라체
해요체
해체
Where I acquired the above resources, is a great website for Korean Language Learners. You can check it out here. 
I really really hope this helped in some way! I know that formalities are really difficult to grasp but once you get it, it becomes easier. Like I said above, it’s really easy to start recognizing which formality is used because of how the conjugation ending looks (you even have a bit of a hint inside the formality’s name itself). Formalities can look and sound different / confusing / difficult, but as long as you get the basics down, it becomes a lot easier with more practice. 
If you’re still confused, please shoot me a message and we can figure it out together! 
Happy Learning :) 
~ SK101
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epfks · 4 years
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Hi there! In this post I will explain when and how you should use French verb tenses. French has a lot of tenses and most of them may seem rather complicated, but once you get the hang of it they start making sense. I’ll try my best to explain everything as clearly as possible but if you have any questions or corrections after reading this post, please don’t hesitate to let me know!
Content:
La base/the basics
Les verbes irréguliers/irregular verbs
Participe présent/the present participle 
Participe passé/the past participle
Indicatif/indicative
Présent/present
Imparfait/past
Futur simple/future simple
Passé composé
Plus-que-parfait
Passé simple
Futur antérieur
Passé antérieur
Subjonctif/subjonctive 
Présent/present
Imparfait
Passé/past
Plus-que-parfait
Conditionnel/conditional 
Présent/present
Passé/past
Impératif présent/imperative present
La base
Regular French verbs are divided into three categories: 
(1) verbs ending on -er (2) verbs ending on -re (3) verbs ending on -ir
The verbs on -ir are further subcategorized into two groups, which follow different conjugation rules. I’ll explain this further when I get to the tenses themselves.
The root of a verb is the infinitive without the ending (so without -er, -re or -ir).
Afficher davantage
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epfks · 4 years
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I believe in free education, one that’s available to everyone; no matter their race, gender, age, wealth, etc… This masterpost was created for every knowledge hungry individual out there. I hope it will serve you well. Enjoy!
FREE ONLINE COURSES (here are listed websites that provide huge variety of courses)
Alison 
Coursera
FutureLearn
open2study
Khan Academy
edX
P2P U
Academic Earth
iversity
Stanford Online
MIT Open Courseware
Open Yale Courses
BBC Learning
OpenLearn
Carnegie Mellon University OLI
University of Reddit
Saylor
IDEAS, INSPIRATION & NEWS (websites which deliver educational content meant to entertain you and stimulate your brain)
TED
FORA
Big Think 
99u
BBC Future
Seriously Amazing
How Stuff Works
Discovery News
National Geographic
Science News
Popular Science
IFLScience
YouTube Edu
NewScientist
DIY & HOW-TO’S (Don’t know how to do that? Want to learn how to do it yourself? Here are some great websites.)
wikiHow
Wonder How To
instructables
eHow
Howcast
MAKE
Do it yourself
FREE TEXTBOOKS & E-BOOKS
OpenStax CNX
Open Textbooks
Bookboon
Textbook Revolution
E-books Directory
FullBooks
Books Should Be Free
Classic Reader
Read Print
Project Gutenberg
AudioBooks For Free
LibriVox
Poem Hunter
Bartleby
MIT Classics
Many Books
Open Textbooks BCcampus
Open Textbook Library
WikiBooks
SCIENTIFIC ARTICLES & JOURNALS
Directory of Open Access Journals
Scitable
PLOS
Wiley Open Access
Springer Open
Oxford Open
Elsevier Open Access
ArXiv
Open Access Library
LEARN:
1. LANGUAGES
Duolingo
BBC Languages
Learn A Language
101languages
Memrise
Livemocha
Foreign Services Institute
My Languages
Surface Languages
Lingualia
OmniGlot
OpenCulture’s Language links
2. COMPUTER SCIENCE & PROGRAMMING
Codecademy
Programmr
GA Dash
CodeHS
w3schools
Code Avengers
Codelearn
The Code Player
Code School
Code.org
Programming Motherf*?$%#
Bento
Bucky’s room
WiBit
Learn Code the Hard Way
Mozilla Developer Network
Microsoft Virtual Academy
3. YOGA & MEDITATION
Learning Yoga
Learn Meditation
Yome
Free Meditation
Online Meditation
Do Yoga With Me
Yoga Learning Center
4. PHOTOGRAPHY & FILMMAKING
Exposure Guide
The Bastards Book of Photography
Cambridge in Color
Best Photo Lessons
Photography Course
Production Now
nyvs
Learn About Film
Film School Online
5. DRAWING & PAINTING
Enliighten
Ctrl+Paint
ArtGraphica
Google Cultural Institute
Drawspace
DragoArt
WetCanvas
6. INSTRUMENTS & MUSIC THEORY
Music Theory
Teoria
Music Theory Videos
Furmanczyk Academy of Music
Dave Conservatoire
Petrucci Music Library
Justin Guitar
Guitar Lessons
Piano Lessons
Zebra Keys
Play Bass Now
7. OTHER UNCATEGORIZED SKILLS
Investopedia
The Chess Website
Chesscademy
Chess.com
Spreeder
ReadSpeeder
First Aid for Free
First Aid Web
NHS Choices
Wolfram Demonstrations Project
Please feel free to add more learning focused websites. 
*There are a lot more learning websites out there, but I picked the ones that are, as far as I’m aware, completely free and in my opinion the best/ most useful.
532K notes · View notes
epfks · 4 years
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LEARN KOREAN
For all you international kpop fans out there who’d like to learn Korean (for multiple reason I guess?), I have collected a large collection of online textbooks, websites, resources, and blogs that can help you achieve your goal!
online textbooks: [ all the downloads are pdfs, no .rar files! ] 
My Korean – book one
My Korean – book two
Dirty Korean
Using Korean
Basic Korean
Korean from Zero! – book one
Korean Grammar for International Learners
Using Korean: a Contemporary Use
Intermediate College Korean
Living Language Korean Course
Continuing Korean
Handbook of Korean Vocabulary
Korean Grammar in Use
Korean for Dummies
Korean Made Simple (not a download)
websites:
how to study korean
Sogang Korean Program
learn korean
talk to me in korean
lets learn korean
free korean lessons
korean for dummies cheat sheet
korean class 101
korean class 101 (youtube)
talktomeinkorean (youtube)
sweetandtasty (youtube)
seemile (youtube)
common vocabulary
useful korean phrases
grammar + vocab reference
vocab games
quizlet
Apps: [ some may only be available for iphone or android and not both so bear with me ]
pop-popping korean (iOS + android)
tengugo hangul (iOS + android)
kdrama talk (iOS only) 
Neme Korean (iOS + android)
KORLINK by Talk to Me in Korean (iOS + android)
Learn Korean by Bravo Language (iOS + android)
Korean Flashcards (free on android only, $4.99 on iOS)
Learn Korean 6000 words (android only)
TOPIK One (iOS + android)
Dongsa (iOS + android)
POPYA animals & fruits + vegetables (iOS + android)
misc. resources:
korean keyboard
culture notes
text slang
crash course on honorifics
children’s books
the chosun (news in korean)
korean class 101 podcast
talk to me in korean podcast
blogs: [ most of these seem pretty active as far as i can tell ]
unyounglearnskorean
study-korean
translating korean
letstteok-korean
onestopkorean
learnkoreanwithmusic
hangeulit
learninghangukeo
way-to-fluency
snubiwriteskorean
easykorean
cassarilla
teachmykorean
HAPPY STUDYING EVERYONE!!!
31K notes · View notes
epfks · 4 years
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Grammer Post Master List
A master list of grammar posts on my blog. These are in Korean alphabetical order and are mostly intermediate level. 
~거나 .. ~거나
~거든
~게
~겠군요
~고
~고 나다
~고말고요
~고 말다
~고 해서
~고는
~ 고도
~고요
~고서
~고자 하다
~곤 하다
~기는요
~기는 하다
~기란
~기로 약속하다 / 결심하다
~기만 하다
~는 김에
~는 대신에
~는 모양이다 
~는 물론이다
~는 바람에
~는 사이(에)
~는다고 보다
~는다고 하던데 
~는다고 해서
~는다는 것이
~는다니까 
~는다면
~는다면서요?
~는답니다 
~는데도 
~다니
~다니(요)?
~단 말이에요.
~더라
N + 더러
~던데
~도록 하다
~도 (말고) .. ~도 말고
~듯이
N + 만 못하다
N + 만하다
~어/아 놓다 
~어/아/여 버리다
~어/아/여다가 
~어/아야
~어/아야 겠다
~어/아/여야지요
~어/아/여지 
어찌나 ~은/는지
~었/았더니
~었/았던 것 같다
~었/았/였을 텐데 
~에 따르면
~에 비해서
~(으)려던 참이다
~(으)면 되다
~(으)면서도
N을/를 대상으로
~(으)ㄹ 만하다
~(으)ㄹ 뻔하다
~(으)ㄹ 뿐만 아니라
~(으)ㄹ 뿐이다
~(으)ㄹ 텐데(요) 
~(으)ㄹ걸요
~(으)ㄹ까 하다 
~(으)ㄹ지도 모르다 
N+(이)라도
N+(이)라든가
 N+(이)야말로
자고?
~지
~지 그래요?
~지요
~처럼
Etc. 
~제일/일등/첫째 가다
[Time Noun] 이/가 되다
2K notes · View notes
epfks · 4 years
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Korean Numbers 101
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