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1 q¼õ
1 Practising Korean vowel sounds
In the list below all the twenty-one Korean vowels are given with approximate Australian English
equivalents. As we will learn in the next unit, each of the twenty-one Korean vowels – not just ‘single’
vowels (ie a, e, o, u and i) but also ‘complex’ vowels (eg ae, ya, wa, etc) – is represented as a
different vowel symbol in Hangeul. Let’s practise the sounds.
a as in part
ae as in cable
ya as in yard
yae as in yabby
eo as in pot
e as in pet
yeo as in yonder
ye as in yet
o as in port
wa as in wonder
wae as in wag
oe as in wet
yo as in your
u as in do
wo as in wobble
we as in wet
wi as in weeds
yu as in few
eu as in urn
ui Say Ernie without the n (and without moving the lips)
i as in feet
2 c G Shin 2006
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2 Practising Korean consonant sounds
What are the consonants that you have in your language but not in Korean?
g
kk as in sky
n
d
tt as in stop
r/l
m
b
pp as in spot
s
ss
ng as in sing
j
jj
ch
k
t
p
h
• As mentioned in the main text, b, d, g and j are pronounced the same
as in English, except when they occur sentence-initially. In this case
they are pronounced as p, t, k and ch, respectively. Now practise
reading the following expressions.
ban-chan a-beo-ji don pa-do
side dishes father money waves
gom a-gi Jo-a-yo a-ju
bear baby That’s good! very much
• Korean r is a ‘flap’ r. Although replacing r with English r does not
bring about a meaning change, you should know r is produced by a
single, quick flap of the tongue against the alveolar ridge – the inward
projection of the gums between the upper teeth and the hard palate.
Ask your instructor for a demonstration. Now practise.
sa-rang gu-reum da-ri Geu-rae-yo
love clouds bridge That’s right!
• Korean l is a ‘retroflex’ l. You produce a retroflex l sound in the same
manner as you do an l, except that your tongue tip should be placed on
the hard palate, not at the back of the upper teeth. Now practise.
sal-lim Mol-la-yo Dal-la-yo gil
house keeping I don’t know. It’s different. road
• A doubled consonant, ie
pp, tt, ss, jj or kk,
indicates tensed
pronunciation. In English
tensed consonants do not
constitute separate sound
categories for
distinguishing between
words, but tensed
consonants do exist. For
example, the p, t and k
sounds in s clusters are
tensed consonants – such
as spot, stop and sky. Now
practise.
bul ppul pul
fire horn grass
dal ttal tal
the moon daughter mask
geun kkeun keun
root string large
Ja-yo Jja-yo Cha-yo
I’m sleeping. It’s salty! It’s cold!
sal ssal
flesh rice
• By convention, s and ss shall be pronounced respectively as sh and ‘tensed’ sh (ie sh with a
stronger hiss) if they are followed by i or y. When you read si, for instance, you should not
read it in the same way of naming the English letter c but as she.
si-heom si Sim-sim-hae-yo Me-i-seun-ssi
exam peom I’m bored! Mr Mason
c G Shin 2006 3
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3 Understanding basic Insa
Match each of the Korean Insa expressions on the left with its English equivalent on the right.
An-nyeong-ha-se-yo? • • Come in.
An-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo. • • Good-bye (to someone staying behind).
An-nyeong-hi gye-se-yo. • • Good-bye (to someone leaving).
An-jeu-se-yo. • • Hello. How are you?
Ban-gap-sseum-ni-da. • • See you again.
Deu-reo-o-se-yo. • • I’m sorry.
Eo-seo o-se-yo. • • It’s O.K.
Gam-sa-ham-ni-da. • • Pleased to meet you.
Gwaen-cha-na-yo. • • Take a seat.
Mi-an-ham-ni-da. • • Sorry I’m late.
Ne. • • Thank you.
Neu-jeo-seo mi-an-ham-ni-da. • • Thank you.
Tto man-na-yo. • • Welcome.
Go-map-sseum-ni-da. • • Yes.
4 c G Shin 2006
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4 Reading basic Insa aloud
Read aloud each of the Korean Insa expressions.
• An-nyeong-ha-se-yo?
• An-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo.
• An-nyeong-hi gye-se-yo.
• An-jeu-se-yo.
• Ban-gap-sseum-ni-da.
• Deu-reo-o-se-yo.
• Eo-seo o-se-yo.
• Gam-sa-ham-ni-da.
• Go-map-sseum-ni-da.
• Gwaen-cha-na-yo.
• Jon Me-i-seun-i-e-yo.
• Ka-il-li Wo-keo-ye-yo.
• Mi-an-ham-ni-da.
• Ne.
• Neu-jeo-seo mi-an-ham-ni-da.
• Tto man-na-yo.
c G Shin 2006 5
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5 Exchanging Insa
This exercise is to help you respond appropriately to Insa. Firstly, cover Column 2. Then read the
first item in Column 1 and try to think of an appropriate response. When you have your response,
uncover the first item in Column two and check your response. Now, repeat for the rest of Column 1.
Column 1 Column 2
1.
An-nyeong-ha-se-yo? Ne, an-nyeong-ha-se-yo?
Ka-il-li wo-keo-ye-yo. YOUR NAME-ye-yo or -i-e-yo.
2. Ban-gap-sseum-ni-da. Ne, ban-gap-sseum-ni-da.
3. Neu-jeo-seo mi-an-ham-ni-da. Gwaen-cha-na-yo.
Ne, gam-sa-ham-ni-da.
4. Gam-sa-ham-ni-da. or
Gwaen-cha-na-yo.
5. An-nyeong-ha-se-yo? Ne, an-nyeong-ha-se-yo?
Ne, go-map-sseum-ni-da.
6. Go-map-sseum-ni-da. or
Gwaen-cha-na-yo.
Ne, gam-sa-ham-ni-da.
7. Deu-reo-o-se-yo. or
Ne, go-map-sseum-ni-da.
Ne, an-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo.
8. An-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo. or
Ne, an-nyeong-hi gye-se-yo.
9. An-nyeong-hi gye-se-yo. Ne, an-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo.
10. Eo-seo o-se-yo. An-nyeong-ha-se-yo?
11. Tto man-na-yo. Ne, tto man-na-yo.
12. Mi-an-ham-ni-da. Gwaen-cha-na-yo.
Ne, gam-sa-ham-ni-da.
13. An-jeu-se-yo. or
Ne, go-map-sseum-ni-da.
6 c G Shin 2006
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6 Practise: What do you say?
Following is a series of social situations. Discuss with your instructor what would be an appropriate
response. Note that in some cases no substantial response may be required.
1. A waitress brings your order.
2. The taxi-driver gives you your change.
3. The taxi-driver reminds you that you’ve left your umbrella in the cab.
4. The class starts at 11.00 a.m, you come at 11.20 a.m.
5. There is a knock, you open the front door and it is your friend.
6. You made a phone call on behalf of a friend who cannot speak English and are now responding to
his thanks.
7. You finish a brief conversation with a friend whom you’ve met by chance on the street.
8. You greet your teacher.
9. The waiter brings your drink, it is not what you remember ordering, the waiter offers to change it,
but you decide to keep it.
10. Your Korean class ends. Your teacher says “Thank you”, you say to your teacher ...
11. The cashier gives you your change and thanks you for your custom.
12. A Korean friend makes a phone-call on your behalf to resolve a problem.
c G Shin 2006 7
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7 Hangeul preview: Consonants and vowels
Here are the lists of Korean consonants and vowels again, but this time with Hangeul letters as well.
We invite you to have a close look at them, and discuss with your fellow students how tensed
consonants and ‘complex’ vowels are represented in Hangeul in particular.
Consonants
g
kk  as in sky
n 
d 
tt  as in stop
r/l 
m 
b 
pp  as in spot
s 	
ss 

ng  as in sing
j
jj 
ch 
k 
t 
p 
h 
Vowels
a a as in part
ae b as in cable
ya c as in yard
yae d as in yabby
eo e as in pot
e f as in pet
yeo g as in yonder
ye h as in yet
o i as in port
wa j as in wonder
wae k as in wag
oe l as in wet
yo m as in your
u n as in do
wo o as in wobble
we p as in wet
wi q as in weeds
yu r as in few
eu s as in urn
ui t Say Ernie without the n (and without moving the lips)
i u as in feet
8 c G Shin 2006
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8 Hangeul preview: Basic Insa
Below are basic Insa expressions again, written in Hangeul as well. Using the lists of Hangeul letters
above, ascertain as much as possible how Hangeul letters are used. Do this exercise with your fellow
students. In particular, do you see where spaces are? Do you see how ‘strangely’ the letter  is used?
Are there any discrepancies between what is romanised and what is written in Hangeul?
•
An-nyeong-ha-se-yo?
q´PÜ€Ä
;Vx§?
•
An-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo.
q´PÜ€Ä
 ;Vx§.
•
An-nyeong-hi gye-se-yo.
q´PÜ€Ä
 5;Vx§.
•
An-jeu-se-yo.
:F`xˆ;Vx§.
•
Ban-gap-sseum-ni-da.
o´‡¡ëTB†Œ.
•
Deu-reo-o-se-yo.
¤÷Š#Tx¦;Vx§.
•
Eo-seo o-se-yo.
#TX x¦;Vx§.
•
Gam-sa-ham-ni-da.
3FS®‹.
•
Go-map-sseum-ni-da.
q„¥ëTB†Œ.
•
Gwaen-cha-na-yo.
ÆI¬ª˜x§.
•
Jon Me-i-seun-i-e-yo.
wóˆ 9RuÙˆVx§.
•
Ka-il-li Wo-keo-ye-yo.

¨óÀ ö
Wx§.
•
Mi-an-ham-ni-da.
q´P®‹.
•
Ne.
63.
•
Neu-jeo-seo mi-an-ham-ni-da.
=†#TX q´P®‹.
•
Tto man-na-yo.
€¦ n´Px§.
c G Shin 2006 9
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2 w´‡¢íW (1)
1 Writing Hangeul letters
Write all the Hangeul consonants and vowels in the table below.
Consonants
g kk n d tt
r/l m b pp s
ss [ ]/ng j jj ch
k t p h
Vowels
a ae ya yae eo
e yeo ye o wa
wae oe yo u wo
we wi yu eu ui
i
10 c G Shin 2006
w´‡¢íW (1)
2 Vowel letters
Re-group the following vowel letters, according to their shapes: vertical, horizontal or mixed. Give
their pronunciations (ie romanisations) as well.
a t i
c e j
k g m
u d p
b f n
h l o
r s q
Vertical Vowel Letters
Horizontal Vowel Letters
Mixed Vowel Letters
c G Shin 2006 11
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3 Consonant letters
Give the pronunciation (ie romanisation) of each of the following consonant letters.
12 c G Shin 2006
w´‡¢íW (1)
4 Reading Hangeul syllables (1)
The following list of words are commonly used English words in Korean. They should not be
regarded as foreign words, but rather as Korean words of foreign origin. Your task is identify, or guess,
what they are.
5:NÁ 9Ru¦ 
;V 8Rsøˆ |«|«
#T
rœ !Twˆ
x¦ 
;V|ˆ @Rwˆ
|«wˆ|ˆ 
ö
wˆ
‘©wˆ x¦

9R q¼õ'NŽ® }ˆ
c G Shin 2006 13
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5 Reading Hangeul syllables (2)
Here are more Korean words of foreign origin. Your task is identify, or guess, what they are.
wˆ¡ˆ6NÁ =yˆ wˆ?/
	yˆ }¦¡ˆ }ˆm¼õ'N
wˆt¼õ t«¾õ x¦®Úõ ­wˆ
!T'N #T ?
Qø(Nwˆ 
Šž 
sˆ
Šžsˆ x¦tÞˆ ùÓyˆ
P¸ø
½õ 9GVB‚Ž yˆ¡ˆ|ˆ
14 c G Shin 2006
w´‡¢íW (1)
6 Reading Hangeul syllables (3)
Here are more Korean words of foreign origin. Your task is identify, or guess, what they are.
²Úõr¼õ A¾õ
wˆ öwˆ
 sˆ
q¼õ½õ
N rœ
­ zý»
'N žñû
¬ }¦wˆ'N
}ˆt« ˆJø ¹‹ ­
yˆ wˆ}¦zˆ 
 NÁ
c G Shin 2006 15
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7 Reading Hangeul syllables (4)
Below are some English first names in Hangeul. Tell us what they are.
wóˆ
'N gBõ
r¼õ =V:NÁwˆ ¨r´‡
t«!T|ˆ ¡ˆwˆu¼õ p¼¾
Sø |« t«o¼õ
y¦x¦ t«!T|ˆ =V
7Lsˆ %`sˆ Vsˆösˆ
x¦ y¦gBõ q„qÞˆ
16 c G Shin 2006
w´‡¢íW (1)
8 Reading Hangeul syllables (5)
Below are some Korean surnames. Read them aloud, and see if you know any Koreans with these
surnames.
3FV q„ ':A ‰† 
¬
3NÁ 4FS rœ Œ® sëˆ
n¼¾ 8FO 8FV : Lô
¾õ X Þ¶Ä uóˆ B‚Ž
p¼¾ 9NÁ q´P :GV x¦
­ ® vìˆ  q¼õ
:NÁ ;FV ½õ àíÄ y¦
‘¨ r¼õ 	  Öõ
Ä% w´‡ )d IßÁ 4+}
c G Shin 2006 17
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3 w´‡¢íW (2)
1 Reading more Hangeul syllables (1)
The following list of words are commonly used Korean words of foreign origin. Your task is
identify, or guess, what they are.
!Q(ç
 (ŽÉÓ' Hsß¼
ÖqtÀÒ
Ùþ›!Q
 ñ9š x_v 9šYUq„
àÔ!3 ÚÔAt#Q
{9
€92£§ YJáÔ n$àÔ
sàÔ9þtXO –ÐÖ¿	 n“
ï·ú˜ fqÛ¼ XsàÔ
àÔ ½™×¼ K‰#QÛ¼{9
“Ee¦ “¦wn= l
18 c G Shin 2006
w´‡¢íW (2)
2 Reading more Hangeul syllables (2)
Here are more Korean words of foreign origin. In the list you’ll find some of English names as well.
Identify, or guess, what they are.
R 62T'_ ßÌvS
Ø•v|¡ím¿‘ ÛÌv:ckP Û!º(8
ƒç¡ìm}¹ 
Ã‘ßÇ îm_
)	 $ãÑûi@ {¡È‘[k;
8R ÚvS ]Ð
Ð
b)	 «»S Û!ºPÑ
ómÔ×vÑ G)	 ómÔó# 
¼ÿ› ÑQÑ á™Óó# 
QÚvÇ b E·x
c G Shin 2006 19
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3 Reading Hangeul
The following list of words contains some examples of countries’ names. Your task is identify, or
guess, what they are.
uŒX{Œ 63Ü!CK[ewŒ Ž£`Õ¥_AwŒ
•gX ¤˜AŒ | {Œ
XZ NSœ^ç Â÷@[¨
ºgNS[ PS€Œ€’h ß'CUS
{Œà¤˜A aÕNS ôcÓw 63[
?
_{ŒS[e ÚhéK[ewŒ
Œ‚Ék{Œ ùcÓK[ewŒ ôcÓW
Ùí  xŒ˜¦¶g `×€Œ
Q[ v xŒà {ŒASôcÓ
20 c G Shin 2006
w´‡¢íW (2)
4 Capital cites ...
Match up the following countries with their capital cities.
1. ”¸ØÔJ?s • • s–Ðq
2. ´ú˜YUsr • • u´
3. ÚÔ|9 • • ×¼o×¼
4. Û¼J?D!p • • ժ׼
5. Û¼`…“ • • ~½Ó9q
6. sß¼ • • ÂÒ`…Û¼àÔ
7. sêøÍ • • ÚÔ|9o
8. “•¸W1r • • Û¼:Ÿ¤f.Ë2£§
9. H • • 
10. H • • š¸_þt–Ð
11. Ǩ • • š¸ü
12. {9½™×¼ • • 
ØÔ
13. —2;êøÍ×¼ • • Ǩ·ú˜µ¡§ÉÒØÔ
14. €9o—2; • • _…K‰êøÍ
15. +ùAo • • ó¡šdç
v
c G Shin 2006 21
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5 Hangeul reading
Look at the following secret messages. Your task is to use the ‘Random Hangeul Character Table’
below and translate each of the messages into English.
• a4 a2 f6 SPACE a1 d3 b5
• a4 a2 f6 SPACE b1 d3 b5
• d1 a3 c5 f4 b5
• c2 SPACE e2 e1 b5
• c4 b3 SPACE a5 d3 b5
• b2 c4 a5 d3 b5
• b6 SPACE f2 f5 e3 f5 d4 b5
• f5 c3 e4 f5 d4 b5
• d6 a6 d2 SPACE d5 e6 f4 b5
• f1
• c1 c6 f3 b5
• b4 e5 d3 b5
Random Hangeul Character Table
a b c d e f
1  5 Æs¬ 3NÁ  63
2 Ü€Ä ¤÷Š €¦  n´P 9R
3 9FV X ¥¾ ;V uÙˆ 
4 q´P :F` #T V ßîÄ W
5 x¦ x§ ­ ö xˆ 
6 ¨óÀ wóˆ ª˜ 
 
 

22 c G Shin 2006
w´‡¢íW (2)
6 Writing Hangeul syllables
Write the following Insa expressions from Unit 1 in Hangeul. Note that in each box only one
syllable is to be written. Also, pay attention to spacing where applicable, and put the relevant
punctuation mark at the end as well.
1. An-nyeong-ha-se-yo?
2. Eo-seo o-se-yo.
3. An-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo.
4. An-nyeong-hi gye-se-yo.
5. Tto man-na-yo.
c G Shin 2006 23
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7 More Hangeul reading
Practise reading some Korean words. They are in general items of Korean food and clothing, for
which there are no ready English translations.
3NÁ	 staple Korean side-dish
§Šq„ Korean-style barbecue
w´‡Aµ‡ Korean national dress
SX 12-string Korean musical instrument
;FV‰† hour-glass-shaped Korean drum
v´‡wœ dramatic song-narrative art form
¬ëRE×¾ masked dance art form
Lô¨óÀ the ‘hundred days’ – the major celebration of the birth of a child.
i‹w¡ëT a person’s sixtieth birthday – the major celebration in a person’s life.
7FO+ñÀ cloudy rice wine
·‡ Korean board game – ‘go’ in Japanese
wœ‘¨ distilled Korean liquor
9¹Œ knot-tying handicraft
’­Þ¶½ the Autumn Moon festival – the most significant festival day in Korea
jU traditional Korean horsehair hat
Romanisations: Gimchi, Bulgogi, Hanbok, Gayageum, Janggu, Pansori, Talchum,
Baegil, Hwangap, Makgeolli, Baduk, Soju, Maedeup, Chuseok, and Gat.
24 c G Shin 2006
w´‡¢íW (2)
8 Word squares
All but one of the countries in the box below can be found in the word square below, if you read
vertically or horizontally. Which one is it?
Australia Bangladesh Brazil Colombia France
Grenada Guinea Hungary Liberia Mali
Mexico New Zealand Pakistan Panama Poland
Saudi Arabia Sri Lanka Sweden Tonga Yugoslavia
ª   — ; 2   _
—  C
–C n
-
¯ p8  `e 2 FC n  C
[ 8… [ xC °e  2C Z o) K– =e
¥R ¹
— 2C Z
7R = F 3 n
=e nC
o) 7– ¹R  Ab 2C ¦™ 2 $e
KS 2C – C-e G n
n « ZC  
Z p, C n 2 FC n 7– AH ZC —
Z 7‚ nC 8 }Dc 7T  [ r2 #T º™
´C n
sR œe 8… FC n R — n o)
c G Shin 2006 25
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4 #T x§?
1 Places where we go ... (1)
What do we call each of the following places in Korean? Choose a ‘name’ from the list in the box
below.
3FVÂÔ§óÀ O[@} 7@}†q… s¦XdB
XàíÁ 61 ßî½ ­ZQT
vÞˆT¸û ©óÂ
BƒŒ @}†Mû 9N½5FV
26 c G Shin 2006
#T x§?
2 Places where we go ... (2)
What do we call each of the following places in Korean? Choose a ‘name’ from the list in the box
below.
O[Eá q…§óÀ ST;FV LôÈ*àíÁ
!Twˆ'N¢ëR ÝîÄEá x¦5
©(NµÃ ;FV C¹‹9N½àíÁ @}†q…
c G Shin 2006 27
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3 Crossword
Try this crossword.
1 2 3 4
5
6
7 8
9
10
11 12
ACROSS
3. library
5. student dining hall
8. “He/she takes an exam”
9. inside the department store
10. airport
11. “He/she goes”
12. hospital
DOWN
1. university
2. restaurant
4. book shop
6. “He/she writes”
7. “He/she telephones”
8. to city, downtown
10. park
28 c G Shin 2006
#T x§?
4 Pair work: Question  Answer
Do this exercise in pairs, practising asking, and answering to, a question as shown in the example
below. If you take the A’s role, cover Column B, and ask a question: Are you going to · · ·? using the
picture cue provided. If you take the B’s role, cover Column A, listen carefully what A asks, and
respond: No. I’m going to · · · using the picture cue provided.
EXAMPLE
A B
@}†q…V x§? x§, ©óÂV x§.
A B A B
1. 1. 7. 7.
2. 2. 8. 8.
3. 3. 9. 9.
4. 4. 10. 10.
5. 5. 11. 11.
6. 6. 12. 12.
c G Shin 2006 29
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5 Making a Statement and Asking a Question in the Polite Informal Style
Attach -x§/-#Tx§, ie the Polite Informal ending, to each of the following verb stems. Explain what
rule you have applied to get the answer. Then, practise making a statement or asking a question by
changing the intonation pattern.
• -
• n´P-
• ;FS-
• v¦-
• åZøv¦-
• x¦-
• £Š-
• ¤ˆ-
• -
• Üí½-
• ¨óÐ-
• 
-
• O[Ž­
-
• B„‡=V
-
• 9N½
-
• v눵Ž
-
• 
-
• ½õÈ*
-
30 c G Shin 2006
#T x§?
6 What are they doing?
Tell us what the person or persons in each of the picture cues are doing in Korean.
x§.
O[Ž­Bx§.
£Šx§.
Ox§.
n´Px§.
Üí½#Tx§.
Àx§.
B„‡=VBx§.
åZøÀx§.
9N½Bx§.
-hx§.
Âx§.
v눵ŽBx§.
Bx§.
¨óÐ#Tx§.
;FSx§.
½õÈ*Bx§.
c G Shin 2006 31
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7 óê Bx§?
Tell us what the persons below are doing. Number 1 has been done for you.
1 2 3 4
qo).
5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16
32 c G Shin 2006
#T x§?
8 Pair work: Question  Answer
Practise asking, and answering to, a question as shown in the example below. Do this exercise in
pairs. If you take the A’s role, cover Column B, and ask questions in Column A. If you take the B’s role,
cover Column A, listen carefully what A asks, and respond using the picture cue provided.
EXAMPLE
A
O[Ž­Bx§?
B
x§, £Šx§.
A B A B
1. x§? 1. 7. Àx§? 7.
2. óê Bx§? 2. 8. Üí½#Tx§? 8.
3. O[Ž­Bx§? 3. 9. B„‡=VBx§? 9.
4. v눵ŽBx§? 4. 10. óê Bx§? 10.
5. ¨óÐ#Tx§? 5. 11. ½õÈ*Bx§? 11.
6. óê Bx§? 6. 12. £Šx§? 12.
c G Shin 2006 33
=V 5 »Î
5 =‚‡	 ‘¨;Vx§.
1 Things we drink/eat ...
What do we call each of the following items in Korean? Choose a ‘name’ from the list in the box
below.
»Î¨óÀ »Î =‚‡	 Kô‘¨
¦Š : »Î 
¨Š x¦®Úõ ­® ‘¨wˆ
¬Š }¦s¦ IßÁ	
34 c G Shin 2006
=‚‡	 ‘¨;Vx§.
2 Categories
This is a vocabulary exercise. Put the words in the box under the correct category heading.
Liquor/Beverage Fruits Places
3FS q…§óÀ ¢W ST;FV
°ëR 8Ru¦63sˆ 7FO+ñÀ 9§óÀ ‘¨wˆ
Aµ‡B„Ž vˆcBõ x¦5 wœ‘¨
¨8FO ¨àíĻΠ61 ;FV
9N½Bc ßî½ ‹¨ ©óÂ
}ŠÂ
q¼õ®ü½ }¦s¦‘¨ @}†q…
c G Shin 2006 35
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3 Word Square
This is a reading exercise. How many places from the vocabulary list in the previous unit can you
find in the word square below? You can look horizontally, vertically and diagonally to find them.
 x _v ™è /BN †½Ó FG +þA
@/ ¥æ
 |9 [j é¶ Ç© Q ©œ
œí †Æ _þv q n š¸  
#î
  “§ !Q •¸ f ›a 
é¶  z´ Û¼ ]j “Ér ’ Êê
`¦ r ?/ '  K 'Ÿ •@r
†Æ Òqt ?/ p û (  Ö¿	
“§ õ f ±ú˜ ½© ĺ ^‰ ²DG
š¸ H †Æ Ñþ˜ ¹¢¤ y©œ 0py 

 ¥æ
 Òqt o f ²DG _ q
¯¹ 6£§ d” h p ™è •¸ z´
%i  {©œ z ½+Ë r ©œ ·ú¦
36 c G Shin 2006
=‚‡	 ‘¨;Vx§.
4 Odd one out
Look at the following groups of words and pick the odd one out. Also, explain why it is the odd one.
1.
¢W Aµ‡B„Ž FV
¨8FO ‹¨ }¦s¦
2.
q¼õÖõO[@} 9N½Bc X©Šßî½
rýÀ7LLôÈ*àíÁ 4FS7sëˆ;FV 3FV4FS'N¢ëR
3.
=‚‡	 8Ru¦63sˆ wœ‘¨
9N½Bc ‘¨wˆ ¬Š
4.
vÞˆT¸û ­ZQT XàíÁ
s¦XdB O[@} 3FVÂÔ§óÀ
5.
5 LôÈ*àíÁ ÝîÄEá
C¹‹9N½àíÁ
BƒŒ @}†Mû 9N½5FV
6.
wˆ¡ˆ6NÁ FV q¼õ9FS
»Î ‹¨
q¼õ®ü½
7.
¨8FO 
ö }ŠÂ
9N½Bc °ëR 3FS
8.
}¦s¦‘¨ öwˆ
 Kô‘¨
wœ‘¨ 7FO+ñÀ ¦Š
c G Shin 2006 37
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5 Pair Work: Buying things ...
Do this exercise in pairs. In this exercise we practise asking about availability of things in a shop,
and if they are available, we also practise asking for them.
If you take the shopkeeper’s role, cover the right Column, listen carefully what your partner says,
and respond. Things that you have in your shop are listed below.
If you take the customer’s role, cover the left Column, and ask your partner if he/she has the things
that you need, one by one. If your partner says yes, then ask for it. Things that you need are in the
frame below.
EXAMPLES
1.
Customer:
¨óÌ#Tx§? Do you have coffee?
Shopkeeper: 63, ¨óÌ#Tx§. Yes, we do.
Customer:
‘¨;Vx§. Can I have coffee?
Shopkeeper: 63, #U ¨óÌ#Tx§. Yes, here you are.
Customer: q„¥ëTB†Œ. Thanks.
2.
Customer: }¦s¦‘¨ ¨óÌ#Tx§? Do you have wine?
Shopkeeper: q´P®‹. }¦s¦‘¨ 2×#Tx§. I’m sorry, we don’t.
Things to sell ...
IßÁ	 }¦s¦‘¨
}¦s¦ 
ö
¬Š
}ŠÂ }ŠÂ
x¦®Úõ wˆ¡ˆ6NÁ
9N½Bc ¨àíÄ»Î
¨8FO wœ‘¨
FV »Î
¦Š 9§óÀ‘¨
»Î 3FS
Things to buy ...
38 c G Shin 2006
=‚‡	 ‘¨;Vx§.
6 Pure Korean Numbers (1)
Match up the following Arabic numbers on the left with pure Korean numbers (ie pronunciations) on
the right. Then cover the right column, and read aloud the numbers.
1 • • aÃ
10 • • Ã
11 • • ¤Š
12 • • ±ú
13 • • wˆ¦Š
14 • • wˆ¦ŠaÃ
15 • • wˆ¦ŠÃ
16 • • wˆ¦Š¤Š
17 • • wˆ¦Š±ú
18 • • wˆ¦ŠIß¿
19 • • wˆ¦Š#U-ýÒ
2 • • wˆ¦Š#UÃ
20 • • wˆ¦Š¨óÀOY
21 • • wˆ¦Š

22 • • Iß¿
23 • • #U-ýÒ
24 • • #UÃ
25 • • 2
À
26 • • 2
ÀaÃ
27 • • 2
ÀÃ
28 • • 2
À¤Š
29 • • 2
À±ú
3 • • 2
ÀIß¿
4 • • 2
À#U-ýÒ
5 • • 2
À#UÃ
6 • • 2
À¨óÀOY
7 • • 2
À

8 • • ¨óÀOY
9 • • 

c G Shin 2006 39
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7 Pure Korean Numbers (2)
All but one of the Pure Korean numbers in the following box can be found in the number table
below. Which one is it?
Z
8U ºU´ ´ [C-esDc‰ sc_
ºU sDcºU´ Z
8U nºUn#
o sDc‰
na.Un#
o sc%-e nºUsDc‰ sDcºUn_
 sc
sc nºUnº‰ [C-en_
 sDcºU ºUn#
o
_ Z
8U´ n$Un#
o sDcºU Z
8UsDc‰
ºUn_
 n$UsDc‰ scn_
 nºU´ scnº‰
ºU nº‰ Z
8Un_
 ºUsDc‰ [C-en#
o
%-e _
  sc´ Z
8Un#
o
26 27 28 3 30 31 87 88 9 1
10 19 2 11 98 97 13 14 68 7
70 71 38 24 40 41 74 76 99 12
91 16 34 36 37 44 46 47 48 5
40 c G Shin 2006
=‚‡	 ‘¨;Vx§.
8 Role Play
Study the conversation piece below, and perform a role play with your fellow students. Your role
play can be based on this conversation piece or on your own.
Waitress: #TX x¦;Vx§.
David: ¨àíĻΠ¤Š
q„ 9§óÀ ‘¨wˆ 
 ‘¨;Vx§.
Waitress: q´P®‹. 9§óÀ ‘¨wˆpÙˆ 2×#Tx§.
David:  ˆ8x§? ... 	 ¨óÌ#Tx§?
Waitress: 63, IßÁ	
q„ =‚‡	, q¼õ9FS	, »Î	 ¨óÌ#Tx§.
David: »Î	 nU ¨óÌ#Tx§?
Waitress: 63, nU ¨óÌ#Tx§.
David:  ˆÛíÁ, ¨àíĻΠ¤Š
q„ »Î	 
 ‘¨;Vx§.
Waitress: 63, 3FS®‹.
NOTES: • 
q„: and •  ˆ8x§?: Is that right? •  ˆÛíÁ: Well, then
c G Shin 2006 41
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6  2ÀWx§?
1 Sino-Korean Numbers (1)
Read aloud the following Sino-Korean numbers.
Alternatively, you can do this exercise in pairs: one person reads the following Sino-Korean numbers
aloud and the other writes down the numbers. When finished, swap roles.
8 3 6 1 9 2 4 7 5 10
70 20 30 10 40 80 60 90 50 100
65 75 45 85 55 5 15 25 35 95
14 89 52 35 47 76 0 23 68 91
2 Sino-Korean Numbers (2)
Do the same as above. But this time you’re practising larger numbers.
400 100 900 600 500 700 200 300 800 1,000
3,000 8,000 6,000 1,000 9,000
4,000 2,000 5,000 7,000 10,000
10,000 40,000 70,000 200,000 600,000
900,000 1,000,000 3,000,000 5,000,000 8,000,000
42 c G Shin 2006
2ÀWx§?
3 Sino-Korean Numbers (3)
All but one of the Sino-Korean numbers in the following box can be found in the number table
below. Which one is it?
Z ™ ‘DcAR ‘DcKH ¯b_D‡AR ZAR , Z‘S
,KH AR KH KHAR ZKHAR ‘Dc_D‡AR ¯b _‚
_D‡ s— o _‚AR u9I _‚KH oAR _‚_D‡AR
u9IAR _‚‘SAR nCAR u9IKHAR _D‡AR nC_D‡ u9I_D‡AR nC
‘S u9I_D‡ o‘SAR ‘Dc nCKHAR sDc ‘SAR ¯b‘S
4 9 6 3 0 8 2 7 5 1
20 60 10 700 300 100 900 8,000 1,000
4,000 70,000 30,000 50,000 10,000 60,000 40,000
20,000 800,000 300,000 700,000 100,000
2,000,000 6,000,000 1,000,000 4,000,000
60,000,000 10,000,000 50,000,000 30,000,000
4 Pure Korean Numbers (4)
Practise reading the following pure Korean numbers.
3 10 1 9 2 7 4 8 11 5
6 12 20 80 50 30 70 40 90 60
c G Shin 2006 43
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5 More Hangeul Reading and Writing ...
Have a look at the following words. They include Korean words of English origin, countries’ names,
and English first names. As you read through, you will find that at least one of the Hangeul characters
in each word is not right – it is upside-down, rotated, etc. Your task is to locate the ‘funny’ character
and re-write the word as it is supposed to be. See if you can finish this exercise within two minutes.
44 c G Shin 2006
2ÀWx§?
6 Grammar: Verb-Ending
Each of the following sentences contains one grammatical mistake. Your task is to underline, and
rectify, each of the mistakes.
1. 5Vx§. 14. ‘¨wˆ ¤÷Š;Vx§.
2. q„:GVVx§. 15. w´‡QT#T O[Ž­
x§.
3. »Î¨óÀ ‘¨wˆ yˆ;Vx§. 16. £Š#Tx§.
4. »Î Üí½x§? 17. B„‡=V
x§.
5. 7@}†q…V x§? 18. åZøv¦#Tx§?
6. 
#Tx§. 19. v눵Ž
x§?
7. qøˆWx§? 20. ¨pÙˆ 9N½
x§?
8. r¼õ ¨óÌx§? 21. ©óÂV x¦#Tx§.
9. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆ ;FS#Tx§? 22. }sëˆWx§.
10. ¨àíĻΠ#Tx§. 23. P¸ôWx§.
11. #U v¦x§. 24. P¸ô ¨óÐx§.
12. ÂÔ 2×x§. 25. 
¨óÀ n´Px§?
13. :F`#Tx§. 26. @­pÙˆ ½õÈ*
x§?
c G Shin 2006 45
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7 Making New Words ...
Korean nouns usually combine quite freely with each other, and being aware of the combinations can
help us to expand our vocabulary at a rapid rate. Look at the following words, and discuss their
meanings with your instructor. All of them combine elements from the vocabulary lists we’ve studied
so far.
• 5©óÂ
• »Î¨óÀ‘¨wˆ
• °ëRnU
• °ëRwˆ¡ˆ6NÁ
• °ëR­®
• Kô‘¨ÝîÄ
• ¦Š5
• ¦ŠÝîÄ
• ÝîÄKô‘¨
• ÝîĐ­®
• »Î‘¨wˆ
• ¨Š©óÂ
• ­®ÝîÄ
• q¼õ9FS	
• sŒr´‡
• sŒ©óÂ
• }¦s¦‘¨wˆ
46 c G Shin 2006
2ÀWx§?
8 ¨óÌ#Tx§, 2×#Tx§?
Look at the objects in the frame below and write answers to the questions that follow, depending on
whether you find the objects in the frame or not.
1.
¨óÌ#Tx§?
2. q„:GV ¨óÌ#Tx§?
3. 5 ¨óÌ#Tx§?
4. 5©óÂ ¨óÌ#Tx§?
5. §Š·Úõ ¨óÌ#Tx§?
6. P¸ô9FV ¨óÌ#Tx§?
7. P¸ô ¨óÌ#Tx§?
8. ©óÂ ¨óÌ#Tx§?
9. q¼õ9FS ¨óÌ#Tx§?
10. ÝîÄ ¨óÌ#Tx§?
11. ¾õ­óÀ ¨óÌ#Tx§?
12. qøˆ ¨óÌ#Tx§?
13. –¶7{ý» ¨óÌ#Tx§?
14. r¼õ ¨óÌ#Tx§?
15. ¨Š ¨óÌ#Tx§?
16. }sëˆ ¨óÌ#Tx§?
c G Shin 2006 47
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9 How many of them ... (1)
Tell us how many of them there are in Korean.
1. 2. 3.
4. 5. 6.
7. 8. 9.
10. 11. 12.
10 How many of them ... (2)
Translate the following sentences into Korean and write them in Hangeul.
1. a mandarin 6. ten watermelons 11. four persimmons
2. five cats 7. six peaches 12. two bottles of beer
3. two cups of ginseng tea 8. three hamburgers (T¸ø!T) 13. five taxis (Rô)
4. four posters (}¦wˆ'N) 9. seven ice-creams 14. eight dogs
5. three computers (âHÁ•©'N) 10. nine plums 15. a glass of water
48 c G Shin 2006
2ÀWx§?
11 How much are they?
Tell us how much they are in Korean. Use a unit noun wherever appropriate.
1. 2. 3.
4. 5. 6.
7. 8. 9.
c G Shin 2006 49
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7 w´‡QT#T q…§óÀ
1 On the left of the first row is ...
Look at the table below and answer the following questions. Number one has been done for you.
1. 'úGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡V óê ¨óÌ#Tx§?
}R sD“n
o).
2. 'úGJ ªŠ vëˆ7LV óê ¨óÌ#Tx§?
3. ¤ŠGJ ªŠ vëˆ7LV P¸ô ¨óÌ#Tx§?
4. ¤ŠGJ ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡V óê ¨óÌ#Tx§?
5. r¼õvÞˆ #T ¨óÌ#Tx§?
6. »ÎpÙˆx§?
7. aÃGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡V óê ¨óÌ#Tx§?
8. ÃGJ ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡V óê
¨óÌ#Tx§?
9. ¥óÈVX ¤ŠGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡V óê
¨óÌ#Tx§?
10. ¥óÈVX ¤ŠGJ ªŠ
vëˆ7LVpÙˆx§?
11. ­®pÙˆ #T ¨óÌ#Tx§?
12. 7FO ªŠ co¬Né‡V óê ¨óÌ#Tx§?
50 c G Shin 2006
w´‡QT#T q…§óÀ
2 What’s the left of the first row?
Do the same as above. This time, however, we are practising ‘identifying’ various places. The
expression, eg, the left of the first row, is not used here to designate the location whereon something is,
and thus we don’t need to use the particle -V. What we are practising here is simply saying “Where, ie,
what place, is the left of the first row?” — “It’s a classroom,” and so on.
1. 'úGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§?
(_DcnCno).
2. 'úGJ ªŠ vëˆ7LpÙˆ #TWx§?
3. 'úGJ ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§?
4. ¤ŠGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§?
5. ¤ŠGJ ªŠ vëˆ7LpÙˆ #TWx§?
6. ¤ŠGJ ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§?
7. ±úGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§?
8. ±úGJ ªŠ vëˆ7LpÙˆ #TWx§?
9. ±úGJ ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§?
10. ¥óÈVX ¤ŠGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§?
11. ¥óÈVX ¤ŠGJ ªŠ vëˆ7LpÙˆ #TWx§?
12. ¥óÈVX ¤ŠGJ ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§?
13. 7FO ªŠ co¬Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§?
14. 7FO ªŠ vëˆ7LpÙˆ #TWx§?
15. 7FO ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§?
c G Shin 2006 51
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3 Insa revisted: Polite-Formal
This exercise is to help you say Insa, and respond, in the Polite-Formal style.
Step 1: Cover Column 2
Step 2: Read the first item in Column 1 and try to think of an appropriate response in the polite-formal
mode. When you have your response, uncover the first item in Column two and check your
response against the response in Item 2.
Step 3: Repeat for the rest of Column 1. Note that sometimes no specific response is called for.
Column 1 Column 2
1. o´‡¡ëTB†Œ. 63, o´‡¡ëTB†Œ.
2. q´PÜ€Ä
§óÂ? 63, q´PÜ€Ä
§óÂ?
3. #TXx¦§óÂx¦. —
4. q´P®‹. Æs¬ª˜B†Œ.
5. =†#TX q´P®‹. Æs¬ª˜B†Œ.
63, q´PÜ€Ä
 5§óÂx¦.
6. q´PÜ€Ä
 §óÂx¦. or
63, q´PÜ€Ä
 §óÂx¦.
7. q´PÜ€Ä
 5§óÂx¦. 63, q´PÜ€Ä
 §óÂx¦.
8. :F`xˆ§óÂx¦. 63, 3FS®‹.
9. €¦ x¦§óÂx¦. 63, q´PÜ€Ä
 5§óÂx¦.
52 c G Shin 2006
w´‡QT#T q…§óÀ
4 Insa revisted: Polite-Informal
Now do the same, this time using the polite-informal style. Again, note that sometimes no specific
response is called for.
Column 1 Column 2
1. q´PÜ€Ä
;Vx§? 63, q´PÜ€Ä
;Vx§?
2. ¤÷Š#T x¦;Vx§. —
3. :F`xˆ;Vx§. —
4. q´PÜ€Ä
 5;Vx§. 63, q´PÜ€Ä
 ;Vx§.
5. q´PBx§. Æs¬ª˜x§.
63, q´PÜ€Ä
 5;Vx§.
6. q´PÜ€Ä
 ;Vx§. or
63, q´PÜ€Ä
 ;Vx§.
7. #TX x¦;Vx§. —
8. q´PÜ€Ä
;Vx§? 63, q´PÜ€Ä
;Vx§?
9. €¦ x¦;Vx§. 63, q´PÜ€Ä
 5;Vx§.
10. =†#TX q´PBx§. Æs¬ª˜x§.
c G Shin 2006 53
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5 From Polite Informal to Polite Formal (1)
Review Pages 42 and 43, and change the style of each of following statements into Polite Formal.
1. 2. 3.
Üí½#Tx§. O[Ž­Bx§. s¦ @}†q…V x§.
4. 5. 6.
q´PBx§. }¦s¦ ‘¨wˆpÙˆ 2×#Tx§. x§, 2×#Tx§.
7. 8. 9.
63, #U ¨óÌ#Tx§. ‘¨ nU ¨óÌ#Tx§. 63, £Šx§.
10. 11. 12.
x§, -hx§. ¨óÀ «óÀt«V 9FS §Š x¦§óÂ
±Úõ|ˆWx§.
à ¬V §óÂ9FSn´P
EáVx§.
54 c G Shin 2006
w´‡QT#T q…§óÀ
6 From Polite Informal to Polite Formal (2)
Review Pages 42 and 43, and change the style of each of following questions into Polite Formal.
1. 2. 3.
#T x§? =‚‡	 ¨óÌ#Tx§? ¨óÐ#Tx§?
4. 5. 6.
Ox§? óê Bx§?  óêWx§?
7. 8. 9.
»Î¨óÀ ‘¨wˆWx§? nU 2×#Tx§?  x¦®ÚõpÙˆ 2ÀWx§?
10. 11. 12.
: /
Æ 5 ¨óÌ#Tx§? £Šx§? r¼õ /
Æ ;FV ¨óÌ#Tx§?
c G Shin 2006 55
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7 From Polite Informal to Polite Formal (3)
Review Pages 42 and 43, and change the style of each of following commands into Polite Formal.
1. 2. 3.
wœ‘¨ ‘¨;Vx§. ¨óÐxˆ;Vx§. ;Vx§.
4. 5. 6.
O[Ž­
;Vx§.  ˆÛíÁ, =‚‡	 ‘¨;Vx§. »Î¨óÀ sˆ;Vx§.
7. 8. 9.
:F`xˆ;Vx§. rœ;Vx§. #TX x¦;Vx§.
10. 11. 12.
;FO
;Vx§. à 5n´P ‘¨;Vx§.  
;Vx§.
56 c G Shin 2006
w´‡QT#T q…§óÀ
8 Crossword
Try this crossword.
1 2 3
4
5
6 7 8
9 10 11
12 13
14 15
ACROSS
2 “There isn’t/aren’t”; “I don’t have.” (Polite
Formal) 4 “Well done!” (Polite Formal)
5 line 7 “All together!” 9 window
10 “Slowly!” 14 “Listen!” (Polite Informal)
15 the right
DOWN
1 “There is/are”; “I have.” (Polite Formal)
2 Dictionary form of the verb not have, not be
3 “Once again!” 6 “I have a question.”
(Polite Informal) 8 two thousand 11 one
thousand one hundred and fifty 12 “Can I
have ... please?” (Polite Informal) 13 on the
left hand side
c G Shin 2006 57
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8 x¦–µV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§?
1 What time is it now? (1)
Look at the clock faces below, and tell us what time it is in Korean.
1. 2. 3.
4. 5. 6.
7. 8. 9.
10. 11. 12.
58 c G Shin 2006
x¦–µV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§?
2 What time is it now? (2)
Look at the clock faces below, and tell us what time it is. This time use Polite Formal endings.
1. 2. 3.
4. 5. 6.
7. 8. 9.
10. 11. 12.
c G Shin 2006 59
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3 Pure Korean numbers, again
Read aloud the following Pure Korean numbers.
Alternatively, you can do this exercise in pairs: one person reads the following Pure Korean numbers
aloud and the other writes down the numbers. When finished, swap roles.
44 70 1 2 55 66 77 40 50 88 99 19
6 7 46 64 73 82 91 8 9 10 20 30
60 3 4 5 80 90 11 22 33 28 37 12
4 Sino-Korean numbers, again
Do the same as above. But this time you’re practising Sino-Korean numbers.
10 20 30 40 50 15 25 35 45 55 5 100
300 1,000 8,000 6,000 9,000 5,000
10,000 40,000 70,000 200,000 600,000 1,000,000
5 Days of the week
Re-arrange the following days of the week in order. Put Monday first.
SXx§¨óÀ @µ‡x§¨óÀ ¨x§¨óÀ m®x§¨óÀ ¨óÀx§¨óÀ |«x§¨óÀ È*x§¨óÀ
60 c G Shin 2006
x¦–µV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§?
6 x§, ... (1)
This exercise is for practising making negative sentences. Answer the following questions in Korean.
For each question, use the picture cue provided. Number 1 has been done for you as an example.
1. @}†q…V x§? 2. O[Ž­Bx§? 3. ¬Š Ox§?
nCo, ¹F(n sR o).
™¹–n o).
4. 9N½Bx§? 5. »Î Üí½#Tx§? 6. v눵ŽBx§?
7. P¸ô ¨óÌ#Tx§? 8. mõsˆ{ý»Vx§? 9. »ÎWx§?
10. ÂÔ ¨óÌ#Tx§? 11. 5Wx§? 12. FV Üí½#Tx§?
13. ©óÂV x§? 14. ½õÈ*Bx§? 15. £Šx§?
c G Shin 2006 61
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7 x§, ... (2)
Answer the following questions as in Number 1. Use Polite Formal endings.
1. ;FS©ëT? 2. ¨óÐB†Œ? 3. AµŒ?
nCo), }‚ sR }†C.
™H,¹†C.
4. §óÂ? 5. B„‡=V®‹? 6. ®‹?
7. vëˆµŽ®‹? 8. Üí½B†Œ? 9. ½õÈ*®‹?
10. n´P¢ëT? 11. 9N½®‹? 12. O[Ž­®‹?
13. M†Œ? 14. D„Œ? 15. ¡ëT?
62 c G Shin 2006
x¦–µV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§?
8 Are you free at 2.00?
This is a pair-work exercise. Using each of the clock faces below, exchange a short conversation
according to the Example.
Example
One person asks a question:
2V j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§?
The other person then gives a negative answer with a reason, for instance:
2pÙˆ q´P ×éx§. :GOB‚‡ ¨óÌ#Tx§.
1. 2. 3.
4. 5. 6.
7. 8. 9.
c G Shin 2006 63
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9 When are you free?
This is a class activity to help you practice asking when people are free. Look at the timetable below
and mark with a cross the times in a week when you are usually busy.
The Situation: Your Korean class was disrupted last week and your teacher has asked you to find
time for an extra class. Various students in your class have various commitments – just as you have, and
a time will have to be negotiated. To do this, form a group of four or five and liaise with each other to
find a time when everyone is free.
Here are some useful phrases.
• È*x§¨óÀ x¦½õV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§? Have you got time on Tuesday morning?
• È*x§¨óÀV j´P 2×#Tx§. I haven’t got any free time on Tuesday.
• 63, Æs¬ª˜x§. Yes, that’s O.K.
• È*x§¨óÀ x¦–µ 2 Æs¬ª˜x§? Is 2.00 pm on Tuesday O.K.?
• x§, q´P ×éx§. No, it’s no good.
- m®x§¨óÀ È*x§¨óÀ ¨x§¨óÀ @µ‡x§¨óÀ SXx§¨óÀ
8
9
10
11
12
1
2
3
4
5
6
64 c G Shin 2006
x¦–µV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§?
10 Let’s sing: Arirang
There can be few countries in the world where communal singing is more a feature of life than is the
case with Korea. Singing is an almost obligatory part of informal partying, and the visitor would be
well advised to come prepared to offer a song. Best of all, of course, would be to come with a Korean
song, and without doubt the best-known of these is Arirang. Arirang is a folk song, sung on the
indigenous Korean five-note scale, and like many folk songs it is not always easy to trace it back in
time. It mainly consists of a distinctive chorus with multiple verses which are not always linked in
meaning very noticeably to the chorus. What is certain is that it is the most easily recognisable tune in
Korea, and well worth taking the time to learn.
Chorus – repeat after every verse
6FV 6FV x§
6FV q„5t« ÙÁ#Tj´P
1) ¥ü½ !Tq„ pÙˆ 4NÁvÞˆ
§óÂs¦ søÀ X ¦ëRÝîÄ k´P
2) H×Á獾 vøˆ63 H×Á獾 Âx§
 3FVp´P 9FSÖõV H×Á獾 Âx§
3) áZûÖõ 
£òвÚõ 0
Às¦ ¥ëaq„
 61 B†‹²Úõ ¨9NÁs¦ ¥ëa
Like many folk songs, the literal meaning of Arirang is not very susceptible to analysis and there is
little or no thematic continuity in the verses. Everyone has their own special understanding of what the
song really means – our understanding is as follows.
The Chorus: The chorus suggests a tone of lament – literally ‘(My love) has gone over the hill.’
Verse 1: (The idea) ‘He’s thrown me over and gone, but he won’t even go ten li before he gets
footsore.’ implying that he will come straight back again.
Verse 2: (The idea) ‘It’s been a season of plenty all through the land.’ – no discernible connection
with Verse 1, but a cheering sentiment in a song that is heavily used as a farming and rice-planting song.
Verse 3: (The idea) ‘There are as many stars in the sky as there are sorrows in my heart.’ – a
somewhat conventional expression of sentimentalised sorrow.
Language Notes: • 6FV: device like ‘tra-la-la’ • q„5: mountain pass • t«: by way of • ÙÁ#Tj´P: has gone
over • : me • ¥ü½: object marker • !Tq„: cast aside (and...) • pÙˆ: (one who is) going • 4NÁ: my lord/my
love • pÙˆ 4NÁvÞˆ: my love who is going • vÞˆ: topic marker • §óÂ: distance of ten li (approximately 4km) •
s¦: even • søÀ X: unable to go • ¦ëRÝîÄ: lameness (‘foot sickness’) • k´P: has occurred, happened • H×Á獾:
abundant harvest • : subject marker • vøˆ63: has come! • Âx§: has come • : these • 3FVp´P: mountains
and rivers • 9FSÖõ: 3,000 li • 3FVp´P 9FSÖõV: in these 3,000 li of mountains and rivers – poetic reference to
Korea • áZûÖõ: azure blue • 
£òŠ: the sky • ²Úõ: in • 0
À: stars • s¦: also, too • ¥ëaq„: are many (and ...) • : this
• 61: my • B†‹²Úõ: in (my) heart • ¨9NÁ: sorrows • ¥ëa: are many
c G Shin 2006 65
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9 #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§?
1 Where does she come from?
Answer the following questions. Number one has been done for you as an example.
1 2 3
#Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§?
µz,nZ
v’n
o).
4 5 6
#Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§?
7 8 9
#Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§?
10 11 12
#Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§?
66 c G. Shin 2006
#Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§?
2 Is he an Australian?
Answer the following questions. Number one has been done for you as an example.
1 2 3
¬ëR 6FSVx§? N 6FSVx§? ¥ëR8R 6FSVx§?
nCo), C-IZ7‚nCno).
4 5 6
m´‡ 6FSVx§?
wˆu´‡ 6FSVx§? wˆARq¼õ 6FSVx§?
7 8 9
q¼õs¦63 6FSVx§? :R|ˆ4FS 6FSVx§? @µŽq„ 6FSVx§?
10 11 12
7n´P 6FSVx§? ¡ˆ 6FSVx§? åZû 6FSVx§?
c G. Shin 2006 67
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3 Where is it located? (1)
Make sentences according to the Example.
Example
½õ¥¾/ßîÄQT
Question: ½õ¥¾vÞˆ #TV ¨óÌ#Tx§?
Response: ½õ¥¾vÞˆ ßîÄQTV ¨óÌ#Tx§. ½õ¥¾vÞˆ ßîÄQTÂÔ ¨s¦Wx§.
NOTE: If we want to say that London is the capital city of the UK, we then say “½õ¥¾vÞˆ ßîÄQTÂÔ ¨s¦Wx§.” Here, ÂÔ is the
possessive marker, equivalent to ’s or of in English, and is pronounced as e in everyday speech.
1. X©Š/w´‡QT
2. àîÄ:GV/A·‡w´‡
3. :R;NÄ(A·‡ØIÄ)/D„ŽQT
4. |«{´(µŽØIÄ)/¨óÀtøˆ
5. AR/7n´P
6. 8FVFÚ‡/¨óÀcBõsˆ
7. ¢óÀ/­óÀv¼õ
8. “±¨ëR?×¾}ˆtˆ/¥ëR8R
9. 
rœ/:R|ˆ4FS
10. 
tˆ/q¼õs¦63
11. jBõ!T/~³‘¨
12. ŠŸÅ-À/q¼õs¦
13. ¨òŠsˆ/
wˆu´‡
14. wˆu´‡§Š/'N#T

15. u¦wˆ¡ˆ/N
16. Â9NĽõ/QT
17. :R¥ü½m¼õ/µ‡¨óÀ
18.
/}ˆ6FVwˆ
19. t«/¬ëR
20. B^ ˆ/63-ýÀm´‡sˆ
4 Where is it located? (2)
Make sentences according to the example.
Examples
Big Ben (8N½°Úõ)
Question: 8N½°ÚõvÞˆ #TV ¨óÌ#Tx§?
Response: ßîÄQT ½õ¥¾V ¨óÌ#Tx§.
1. The Eiffel Tower (VÏ1÷ö)
2. Ayer’s Rock (V#Twˆ?Õº)
3. Disneyland (yˆcBõsˆ)
4. The Great Wall (n´P;FVÞ¶Ä)
5. Mt Fuji (–µp´P)
6. Siberia (:R)
7. The Taj Mahal (®‰)
8. The Colosseum (¬Št«;VC·‹)
9. the Parthenon (
tˆ@Rpóˆ p¼¾½õ)
10. Golden Gate Bridge (¢WqÞˆ5|ˆ
vˆmFÃ)
11. Halong Bay (
?ÕÁ:R)
12. The Petronas Twin Towers (|ˆHáö)
13. Ancorwat (:FV{¯tˆÂ|ˆ Eá)
14. The Charles Bridge (ª‰wˆ vˆmFÃ)
68 c G. Shin 2006
#Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§?
5 The street map
This is a pair-work exercise. Look at the sketch map below, and practise making questions and
answers according to the Example.
Example 1
A:  o¹U%`V vÞˆT¸û ¨óÌ#Tx§?
B: 63, ¨óÌ#Tx§.
Example 2
A:  o¹U%`V ßî½ ¨óÌ#Tx§?
B: x§, 2×#Tx§.
Now ask if the following facilities and amenities can be found nearby.
7@}†q… C¹‹9N½àíÁ
BƒŒ ­ZQT
5 ÝîÄEá ST;FV O[Eá
@}†q… ©(NµÃ !Twˆ 'N¢ëR v눵Ž;FV
c G. Shin 2006 69
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6 What floor is it on?
The situation: Below is a diagram of a building in a shopping centre. On each floor there are a
number of shops and businesses. Someone is asking you about them, and your task is to describe which
floor they are located on.
Question 1 x¦ 5pÙˆ /
Æ EÙÁV ¨óÌ#Tx§?
Response x¦ 5pÙˆ x¦ EÙÁV ¨óÌ#Tx§.
Translation The video shop is on the 5th floor.
Question 2 ST;FVvÞˆx§?
Translation And the cinema?
NOTES:
¦óÀ5NÄ = building;
SK - EÙÁ = the SK-th floor;
È*;FV§óÀ = toilette
8 ~³Î1÷ g`@
7 |ˆFòŠ. $
6 ST;FV E·x
5 x¦ 5 ?
3 ©(NµÃ
2
BƒŒ C¹‹9N½àíÁ
1 ­ZQT vÞˆT¸û
CULTURAL NOTE:
Often there’s no fourth
floor on Korean
buildings, especially if
the building is a
hospital. This is
because the word for
‘four’ (sa - ) is
pronounced in the
same way as the word
for ‘death’ – and
obviously no one wants
to spend much time on
‘the death floor’!
Extension exercise 1: Think a bit about the
building you study Korean in. Which of the
following rooms and facilities are to be found
in it? Make sentences to describe what floor
they’re located on. For example,
nC KDc#D—n }S· sD“n
o). u9I’™n sD“n
o).
Z
RtU s
‹n
o). ...
½õÈ* s¦XdB
BƒŒ
È*;FV§óÀ 9N½5FV 3FVÂÔ§óÀ
XàíÁ 5 âHÁ•©'N§óÀ
Extension exercise 2: Now try the same
activity for the Student Union, or whatever the
main building on your campus is called.
9N½5FV s¦XdB
XàíÁ ©(NµÃ
|ˆFòŠ. ­ZQT
ÝîÄEá ST;FV
¨Š©ó x¦5
BƒŒ vÞˆT¸û
70 c G. Shin 2006
#Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§?
7 The menu
This is a revision exercise. Printed below is a menu from a coffee shop in Seoul. Imagine that you
are describing its contents in Korean for another person, and make sentences as in the Example.
Examples
pÙˆ 8,000EáVx§.
O‰
ÃÝ– · · · · · · · · · · · · 8,000 š{­
ÍQÀA÷ · · · · · · · · · · · · 6,000 š{­
BPO!–) · · · · · · · · · · · · 6,000 š{­
xu¤ÿS · · · · · · · · · · · · 10,000 š{­
}š›ë= · · · · · · · · · · · · 8,000 š{­
’u’‰ · · · · · · · · · · · · 6,000 š{­
$R¶÷ · · · · · · · · · · · · 7,000 š{­
——ª}ûæ¶÷ · · · · · · · · · · · · 7,500 š{­
ôQ¶÷ · · · · · · · · · · · · 7,000 š{­
Oý}™¾Ÿuw · · · · · · · · · · · · 10,000 š{­
ÒON÷ÒOŸuw · · · · · · · · · · · · 9,000 š{­
òùõ)O · · · · · · · · · · · · 8,000 š{­
óç~«)”„¶– · · · · · · · · · · · · 12,000 š{­
V™¾Å|–ō · · · · · · · · · · · · 10,000 š{­
÷–wÅIšæ · · · · · · · · · · · · 8,000 š{­
c G. Shin 2006 71
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8 CROSSWORD
Try this crossword.
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8
9 10
11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18
19 20
21 22
23
ACROSS1 in Class 4 India 6 Northeast Asia
11 a little 13 “It’s difficult.” 14 Germany
16 the West 20 Russia 21 ‘canned’ beer (as
opposed to ‘bottled’ beer) 23 Which country?
DOWN1 capital city 2 Middle East 3 four
o’clock 5 nine (a PK number) 7 North Korea
8 The Arabic Language 9 now 10 “It’s easy.”
11 Korea (DPRK) 12 France 15 Japan
17 Ladies and Gentlemen! 18 South America
19 the vicinity 21 Canberra 22 “Please give
me ...”
72 c G. Shin 2006
#Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§?
9 Role Play
Study the conversation piece below, and perform a role play with your fellow students. Your role
play can be based on this conversation piece or on your own.
Tae-U: pÙˆ #TrˆVX .oP#Tx§?
Annie: ~³‘¨VX .oP#Tx§.
Tae-U: ~³‘¨ #TX .oP#Tx§?
Annie: 63?
Tae-U: ~³‘¨ ... #TX .oP#Tx§?
Annie: , 63, sˆVX .oP#Tx§.
Tae-U:  ˆ8x§? sˆpÙˆ óêt« ®ÜîÄBx§?
Annie: ¢íWFmx§. x¦AR 
­wˆ, 
!T vˆmFÃ, ...
sˆpÙˆ #UN t« ®ÜîÄBx§.
Tae-U: sˆpÙˆ ’­öx§?
Annie: x§, ‘¨ ~ÞÀBx§. sˆV ;N½ q´P
,¤…#Tx§?
Tae-U: 63, ;N½ q´P  ,¤…#Tx§.
Annie: w´‡ ½õ  v¦;Vx§. ‘¨ ª”x§.
Language Notes:
• ~³‘¨ #TX: Where about in Australia
• #UN : various kinds (of things)
• ;N½ q´P · · ·: haven’t (done ...) yet
• Note also how to respond to a negative question in Korean, eg, Aren’t you ...?, Don’t you ...?, etc.
Unlike in English, 63 is used to ‘negatively’ disagree, and x§ to ‘positively’ disagree, with
the question that has been asked. Thus:
sˆV ;N½ q´P ,¤…#Tx§? Haven’t you been to Sydney yet?
63, ;N½ q´P ,¤…#Tx§. No (Lit. Yes), I haven’t. (ie, negative disagreement)
x§, ,¤…#Tx§. Yes (Lit. No), I have. (ie, positive disagreement)
c G. Shin 2006 73
=V 10 »Î
10 /
Æ V ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§?
1 Dates (1)
Practise pronouncing the following Korean dates, then write them down in Hangeul. Note that the
Month has been put before the date.
Alternatively, you can do this exercise in pairs: one person reads the following dates aloud and the
other writes down the numbers. When finished, swap roles.
1.1 3.6 6.8 4.15 1.30 9.13 11.14
12.2 2.22 7.29 7.8 10.31 9.19 7.27
12.12 2.23 8.15 9.9 6.28 5.23 4.17
7.1 12.25 11.22 5.6 12.29 6.5 10.8
5.8 10.10 8.6 9.26 6.16 10.21 3.4
2 Dates (2)
Do the same as above. But this time you’re practising years as well.
1919.3.1 1945.8.15 1948.7.17 1950.6.25 1953.7.27
1960.4.19 1961.5.16 1972.7.4 1972.10.17 1979.10.26
1980.5.18 1987.6.29 1988.9.17 1988.10.2 1990.10.3
1997.11.17 2000.1.1 2000.6.15 2002.5.31 2002.6.30
74 c G. Shin 2006
/
Æ V ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§?
3 When’s your birthday?
This is a questionnaire exercise. Ask as many of your fellow students as you can when their
birthdays are and enter them in the grid below
Example
Question: · · ·, Mû¨óÀ /
Æm® Uª*÷Vx§?
If, for example, the answer is 7 July
Response: 7m® 7¨óÀVx§.
?Ù¾ Mû¨óÀ
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Language Note: • ?Ù¾ = name
c G. Shin 2006 75
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4 The past tense marker (I)
Look at the Verb ‘conjugation’ table below, which is incomplete, and your task is to complete it.
VST Meaning
Polite Informal Statement Polite Informal Statement
PRESENT TENSE PAST TENSE
1. - to go x§ ¡ë^#Tx§
2. v¦- to go and have a look Àx§ ,¤…#Tx§
3. q„¥ëT- to be grateful q„öx§ q„qº#Tx§
4. O[Ž­
- to study O[Ž­Bx§ O[Ž­†ÿ#Tx§
5. Æs¬ª˜- to be all right Æs¬ª˜x§ Æs¬ª˜¨ë^#Tx§
6. £Š- to play £Šx§ As in 5
7. -ýÂ- to be hot Höx§ As in 3
8. ¤Š- to go back ¤Šx§ As in 1
9. ¤Šx¦- to come back ¤ŠÂx§ As in 2
10. ~ÞÀ
- to be warm ~ÞÀBx§ As in 4
11. - to drink Ox§ ÞîÌ#Tx§
12. n´P- to meet n´Px§ As in 1
13. n´P¤÷Š- to make n´P¤÷Š#Tx§ n´P¤÷Š2Ì#Tx§
14. ¥ëa- to be many ¥ëax§ As in 5
15. ¥ëR
- to speak ¥ëRBx§ As in 4
16. Üí½- to eat Üí½#Tx§ As in 13
17. u¦tˆ- to not know ¦Šx§ ¦Š¤ë^#Tx§
18. o´‡¡ëT- to be glad (to see you) o´‡öx§ As in 3
19. :­- to learn :öx§ :qº#Tx§
20. v¦- to see/look at Àx§ As in 2
21. §ëR- to live §ëRx§ As in 5
22. B„‡=V
- to do homework B„‡=VBx§ As in 4
23. p°- to be easy õíöx§ As in 18
24. ;FO
- to begin ;FOBx§ As in 4
25. åZøv¦- to take an exam åZøÀx§ As in 2
76 c G. Shin 2006
/
Æ V ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§?
5 The past tense marker (II)
Do the same as above.
VST Meaning
Polite Informal Statement Polite Informal Statement
PRESENT TENSE PAST TENSE
26. 9N½
- to have a meal 9N½Bx§ As in 4 on the previous page
27. ¤ˆ- to write -hx§ Ì#Tx§
28. ¨ëR- to know ¨ëRx§ As in 5
29. #T:Ê- to be how #TDJx§ #Tˆ#Tx§
30. #TÞÂ- to be difficult #TOöx§ As in 3
31. 2×- to not have 2×#Tx§ As in 13
32. ¾õB†Œ
- to practise ¾õB†ŒBx§ As in 4
33. x¦- to come Âx§ As in 2
34. v눵Ž
- to exercise v눵ŽBx§ As in 4
35. ®ÜîÄ
- to be famous ®ÜîÄBx§ As in 4
36. - to be Vx§/Wx§ 2Ì#Tx§/ßîÌ#Tx§
37. 
- to talk Bx§ As in 4
38. ¨óÀ#T- to wake up ¨óÀ#Tx§ As in 3
39. ¨óÐ- to read ¨óÐ#Tx§ As in 13
40. ¨óÌ- to have ¨óÌ#Tx§ As in 13
41. :NÅ#T!T- to forget :NÅ#T!TOx§ As in 11
42. ;FS- to sleep ;FSx§ As in 3
43. = 2×- to be boring = 2×#Tx§ As in 13
44. = ¨óÌ- to be interesting = ¨óÌ#Tx§ As in 13
45. àí½- to be few àí½#Tx§ As in 13
46. ½õÈ*
- to telephone ½õÈ*Bx§ As in 4
47. ª”- to be good ª”x§ As in 5
48. ‘¨- to give ‘¨#Tx§ ‘¨2Ì#Tx§ but see 19
49. E׿- to be cold ’­öx§ As in 3
50. 
- to do Bx§ As in 4
c G. Shin 2006 77
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6 Yesterday I did ...
This is a questionnaire exercise. Ask the following questions to five of your fellow students and enter
the responses in the grid below.
Example
Question: #T=V /
ÆV ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§?
Response: ÃV ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§.
@}†Mû 1 @}†Mû 2 @}†Mû 3 @}†Mû 4 @}†Mû 5
?Ù¾ ?Ù¾ ?Ù¾ ?Ù¾ ?Ù¾
#T=V /
ÆV ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§?
/
Æ V …ø9N½¥ü½ †ÿ#Tx§?
/
Æ V @}†q…V ¡ë^#Tx§?
/
Æ V àíÁ9NÁ9N½¥ü½ †ÿ#Tx§?
/
Æ V ©óÂV ¡ë^#Tx§?
/
Æ V $Ü€½9N½¥ü½ †ÿ#Tx§?
/
Æ V ;FS©÷Š ©ë^#Tx§?
#T=V /
Æ j´P O[Ž­†ÿ#Tx§?
w´‡QT#T ¨2 ¨óÌ2Ì#Tx§?
/
Æ j´P ¨óÌ2Ì#Tx§?
v눵ŽvÞˆ q´P †ÿ#Tx§?
2À µŽq´P †ÿ#Tx§?
;FSvވ /
Æ j´P ©ë^#Tx§?
78 c G. Shin 2006
/
Æ V ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§?
7 V vs VX
The particle -V indicates progress towards a goal (and is also used with some time expressions), and
the particle -VX indicates the location of an action. Read the following sentences and fill in the blank
space with either -V or -VX where appropriate. Discuss your answers with your fellow student.
Example
2 ....... n´P¢ëT. =⇒ 2 V n´P¢ëT.
@}†Mû 9N½5FV....... n´P¢ëT. =⇒ @}†Mû 9N½5FVVX n´P¢ëT.
1. SX @}†q…....... x§?
2. q…§óÀ....... óê ®‰x§?
3. s¦XdB....... ¡ëZ w´‡QT#T¥ü½ O[Ž­®‰x§?
4. x¦£òŠ ©óÂ....... ¨óÀEN½ ¤Š¡ëT.
5. ~³Î1÷
BƒŒ....... n´P¢ëT.
6. 61獾....... w´‡QT....... ¡ëT.
7. x§, SX獾 12m®....... w´‡QT....... ¡ëT.
8. w´‡QT C¹‹9N½àíÁ....... 9N½®‰x§?
9. 61¨óÀ ~³Î1÷ 8Rwˆ|«6FV....... …ø 9N½¥ü½ ®‹.
10. $Ü€½....... ¡ëZ O[Ž­®‰x§?
11. ½õ ‘¨¥ëRV p´P....... ¡ëRx§?
12. Kôs¦¢ëRsˆ....... T¸ø!T¥ü½ Üí½©÷Šx§?
13. x¦–µ....... s¼õ‰† Mû¨óÀ
....... x§.
14. @}†q…....... ¾õB†Œ®‹.
15. $Ü€½....... ¨Š w´‡ r´‡ §óÂ.
16. C¹‹ ‘¨¥ëR....... 
¨óÀ ©óÂ....... ¨óÀtøˆ C¹‹9N½©÷Š n´P¤÷Šx§?
17. x§, x¦£òŠ x¦–µ....... 7Lsˆ ©óÂ....... w´‡QT C¹‹9N½©÷Š
n´P¹Œ.
c G. Shin 2006 79
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8 Using Particles
This exercise is to help you get used to putting together simple sentences in Korean. Make sentences
according to the model and also to the translations. Note in particular the use of particles (case
markers).
Example
 ˆ 6FS/#T=V/7Lsˆ¥ü½/n´P- That person met David yesterday.
 ˆ 6FSvÞˆ #T=V 7Lsˆ¥ü½ n´P¢ë^#Tx§.
1.  ˆ @}†Mû/P¸ô/¥ëa/¨óÐ- The student reads a lot of books.
2. $ @}†Mû/Î1÷8R½õ/¥ëa/v¦- That student (over there) watches TV a lot.
3. @}†q… o¹U%`/C¹‹9N½àíÁ/‘¨/¥ëa- There are lots of restaurants near university.
4.  ˆ @}†Mû/‘¨¥ëR/B„‡=V//
- That student finished the homework over the weekend.
5. @­/#T=V/x¦–µ/–¶7{ý»/- Tae-U bought a mobile phone yesterday afternoon.
6. ¥¾ßîÄ/#T=V/x¦–µ/q„:GV/- Seon-Yeong bought a cat yesterday afternoon.
7. /3NÁ	/y¦SX/Üí½#Tv¦- Annie tried a little bit of kimchi.
8. $ @}†Mû/¨óÀtøˆ¥ëR/y¦SX/
- That student (over there) speaks a little Japanese.
9. 
¨óÀ/k´P ‘¨¥ëR/w´‡¢íW/¥ëa/¤ˆ- Kylie wrote lots of Hangeul last weekend.
10. #T=V/w´‡QT#T ¨2Â/6FV/¹‰- We listened to the ‘Arirang’ yesterday in the Korean class.
11. @­/#T=V/#Uà /¨óÀ#T- Tae-U got up at six o’clock yesterday.
12. x¦–µ/s¼õ‰†/v눵Ž/
- I exercised with my friend in the afternoon.
13. 7@}†q…/w´‡QT#T/:­- I learn Korean at university
14. 4FW/w´‡QT#T/¾õB†Œ
- I practised Korean during the day.
15. 7Lsˆ/8FS/
/q´P/- David doesn’t drink coffee at night.
16. w´‡QT/3NÁ	/®ÜîÄ
- Korea is famous for Gimchi.
17. /#T=V/w´‡QT#T ¨2Â/=†5/x¦- Annie came late to the Korean class yesterday.
18. ¥óÈ/±úGJ ªŠ/co¬Né‡/q„:GV/¨óÌ- On the left of the third last line is a cat.
19. x¦£òŠ/x¦–µ 1/w´‡QT C¹‹9N½àíÁ/s¼õ‰†/àíÁ9NÁ/Üí½-
I had lunch with my friend at a Korean restaurant at 7.30 yesterday.
20. #T=V/$Ü€½/7 o´‡/D„ŽQT C¹‹9N½àíÁ/s¼õ‰†/$Ü€½9N½/
-
I had dinner with my friend at a Chinese restaurant at 7.30 yesterday.
80 c G. Shin 2006
/
Æ V ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§?
9 Some real life questions
Answer the following questions in Korean.
1. SX #TX §ëRx§?
2. 10獾 ½õV #TX §ëR¨ë^#Tx§?
3. ÂQTV ,¤…#Tx§? #Trˆ V ,¤…#Tx§?
4. ÂQT#T¥ü½ O[Ž­B,¤…#Tx§?
5. #T=V x¦–µ 5V óê †ÿ#Tx§?
6. k´P ‘¨¥ëRV óê †ÿ#Tx§?
7. ½õ ‘¨¥ëRV óê Bx§?
8. w´‡QT#T ¨2ÂvÞˆ 1 ‘¨¨óÀV /
Æ j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§?
9. 
Œ­V /
Æ j´P w´‡QT#T¥ü½ O[Ž­Bx§?
10. w´‡QT s¼õ‰†
q„ ¡ëZ w´‡QT#T¥ü½ ¾õB†ŒBx§?
11. x¦£òŠvÞˆ /
Æm® Uª*÷Vx§?
12. 61¨óÀvÞˆ m®x§¨óÀVx§?
13. w´‡QT#TpÙˆ 2À µŽq´P O[Ž­†ÿ#Tx§?
14. #T=V $Ü€½V #TX 9N½†ÿ#Tx§?
15. SX獾vވ /
Æ ç¾Vx§? 61獾vÞˆx§?
c G. Shin 2006 81
=V 11 »Î
11 ¥ëa sˆ;Vx§.
1 WORD SQUARE
See how many words relating to food you can find in the word-square below. You can look
horizontally, vertically and diagonally to find them.
 Ž,  , AŽ -– $U 
p8 R }– H, !! 'R œ™ sD«
b ª KR }D‡ xC ‚C  FC
'R ‘R #f s–  C KDƒ 
FC }–  ‘‚ C 8… Ž, M-e
[  C  }– #b b
« U– e ZC , K† p, _–
-I }– I =…  n _˜ Ž,
o F Ž, ŒC ¶, _S Œ nC
U nC sD« o _DG Œ ´ C-e
82 c G. Shin 2006
¥ëa sˆ;Vx§.
2 Using -(xˆ)x§
Suggest to people that you meet at the following times and places, using the VST – (xˆ)x§?
form.
Example
at 1.00 at the airport today
x¦£òŠ w´‡ V O[@}VX n´P¢ëRx§?
Shall we meet at 1 o’clock at the airport today?
1. at 9.00 tomorrow at the university
2. at 11.00 this Saturday at the park
3. at l5.00 today at the movie theatre
4. at 12.00 this Sunday at Seoul station
5. at 3.00 p.m. at the coffee shop
6. at 5.00 at the library
7. at 2.00 this afternoon at the bus terminal
8. at 10.00 at the student canteen
9. at 6.00 this evening at the hospital
10. at 11.00 this morning at the bank
11. at 2.00 this Sunday at the park
12. at 7.00 p.m. this Saturday at In-cheon Airport
c G. Shin 2006 83
=V 11 »Î
3 Shall we ...?/Yes, let’s ...
Transform the following verb-stems into ‘Shall we ...?’ questions, and then into ‘Yes, let’s ...’
answers.
Example

-
®‰x§? Shall we do it?
63, ®‹. Yes, let’s do it.
1. ¡ëZ B„‡=V
-
2. s¼õ‰†¥ü½ n´P-
3. j´P;FV©÷Š 2 ÝîÄ -
4. –µ9N½©÷Š ‘¨sëˆ
-
5. §Šq„¥ü½ Üí½#Tv¦-
6. £ëbq„ x§¥ü½ n´P¤÷Š-
7. T¸ø!T¥ü½ Üí½-
8. ¨2©÷Š ;FO
-
9. P¸ô©÷Š ¨óÐ-
10. SX 9N½
-
11. w´‡QT#T¥ü½ O[Ž­
-
12. x¦–µV ½õÈ*
-
13. ¥¾Mû4NÁ
q„ 
-
14. Î1÷8R½õ©÷Š v¦-
15. O[@}V -
16. 12V ;FS©÷Š -
17.  ˆq„ 4V ¨óÀ#T-
18. #ú6FO©÷Š ¤ˆ-
19. »Î ‘¨wˆ¥ü½ -
20. SX qøˆ©÷Š 61-
84 c G. Shin 2006
¥ëa sˆ;Vx§.
4 Using Negatives
Answer negatively to the following questions. For each question use the picture cue provided.
Number one has been done for you as an example.
1. 2.
}¦¡ˆ
q„ }ˆt« Üí½#Tx§? ¨Wx§?
nCo), «—;´ nC«3 sR A
Gn
o).
}
 7Fo3 A
Gn
o).
3. 4.
#U »Î¨óÀ ¨óÌ#Tx§? :GVq„¥ü½ ª”Bx§?
5. 6.
^o¬;FVVx§? j´P;FVvÞˆ 9öx§?
7. 8.
SX Î1÷8R½õ©÷Š Àx§? ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆ 5¥ü½ ª”Bx§?
c G. Shin 2006 85
=V 11 »Î
5 What did you eat yesterday?
Do this exercise in pairs. One of you asks a question: #T=V óê Üí½2Ì#Tx§?, and the other answers
using the picture cue provided. You then exchange at least one follow-up question and the answer.
Number one has been done for you as an example.
1. 2. 3.
#T=V óê Üí½2Ì#Tx§?
M-eC A
Gs
“n
o).
#TX Üí½2Ì#Tx§?
¹R-I t…_DG}
ƒnZ
A
Gs
“n
o).
4. 5. 6.
7. 8. 9.
86 c G. Shin 2006
¥ëa sˆ;Vx§.
6 Find someone who likes ...
This is a class activity. Your objective is to find someone in the class who likes one or more of the
following. Write the names of up to three students who answer ‘Yes’. in the spaces provided.
TARGET QUESTION: w´‡QT C¹‹9N½: w´‡QT C¹‹9N½©÷Š ª”Bx§?
POSITIVE ANSWER: 63, w´‡QT C¹‹9N½©÷Š ª”Bx§.
NEGATIVE ANSWER: ¢íWFmx§.
In case you haven’t met ‘¢íWFmx§.’ before, it is the equivalent of English ‘We-ell...’, and it carries the idea
of negativity effectively – and more politely – than a brusque ‘x§’.
§Šq„: (1) (2) (3)
8NÁ¦ëT: (1) (2) (3)
3NÁ	: (1) (2) (3)
wˆ
5 (Spaghetti): (1) (2) (3)
|ˆ
(Meat-pie): (1) (2) (3)
6FO (Laksa): (1) (2) (3)
q¼õ9FS	: (1) (2) (3)
: (1) (2) (3)
Kô‘¨: (1) (2) (3)
}¦s¦‘¨: (1) (2) (3)
öwˆ
: (1) (2) (3)
¢W}ˆ: (1) (2) (3)
@Rwˆ: (1) (2) (3)
GJyˆ: (1) (2) (3)
®*ù®‹: (1) (2) (3)
w´‡QT ßîÄÈ*: (1) (2) (3)
w´‡QT rœ8: (1) (2) (3)
5: (1) (2) (3)
q„:GV: (1) (2) (3)
Language Notes: ßîÄÈ* = movie; rœ8 = songs
c G. Shin 2006 87
=V 11 »Î
7 MAKING DIALOGUE
Make a dialogue to fit the following situation.
• You have been invited to a Korean home. Your host greets you at the door, and invites you in.
• You say hello to your host.
• Your host asks you to sit down, and offers you a cola.
• You accept the cola.
• You and your host talk for while, and then your host suggests that you both eat.
• You all sit at the table. Your host invites you to begin.
• You eat a plateful and remark on how delicious it is.
• Your host asks if you like Gimchi.
• You reply yes, it’s delicious.
• Your host then invites you to have more Galbi.
• By now, you feel you’ve had enough and decline.
• The meal finishes, and you say you’ve eaten well and add what a good meal it has been.
88 c G. Shin 2006
¥ëa sˆ;Vx§.
8 Role Play
Study the following conversation piece, and do role plays with fellow students on the basis of the
piece or on your own. Below, Seon-Yeong is arranging with Annie to go to a Korean restaurant.
¥¾ßîÄ: ½õ |«x§¨óÀV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§?
Annie: 63?
¥¾ßîÄ: ½õ |«x§¨óÀV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§?
Annie: , 63, j´P¨óÌ#Tx§.
¥¾ßîÄ: w´‡QT C¹‹9N½ #TDJx§? ª”Bx§?
Annie: 63, ª”Bx§.
¥¾ßîÄ: ¡ëR Üí½#T ,¤…#Tx§?
Annie: x§. ¡ëR #TDJx§? nU ¨óÌ#Tx§?
¥¾ßîÄ: 63, nU ¨óÌ#Tx§. @}†q… o¹U%`V ¡ëR©ó ¥ëax§. ¡ëZ ¡ëRx§?
Annie: 63, ¡ëZ x§. /
Æ V ¡ëRx§? C¹‹ ... 6 Æs¬ª˜x§?
¥¾ßîÄ: 63, Æs¬ª˜x§.
Annie:  ˆÛíÁ, 5 o´‡V @}†q…
BƒŒVX n´Px§.
Language Notes: , 63 = Oh, I see ...; C¹‹ ... = uhm ...;  ˆÛíÁ, ... = well, then ...
TRANSLATION
S: Are you free this Saturday?
A: Pardon?
S: Are you free this Saturday?
A: Ah – I understand now. Yes, I’m free.
S: What do you think of Korean food? Do you like it?
A: Yes, I do.
S: Have you tried pork Galbi (spare ribs)?
A: No. What’s it like? Is it nice?
S: Yes it is. There are quite a few Galbi places around near
the school. Shall we go?
A: Sure. What time shall we go? Let’s see, is 6 o’clock OK?
S: Yeah, fine.
A: Well, then, let’s meet at the coffee shop at 5.30.
c G. Shin 2006 89
=V 12 »Î
12 	t« x§, !Twˆt« x§?
1 From ... to ...
Look at the pictures below and make sentences according to the Example.
Example
©óÂVX 61 !Twˆt« ¡ë^#Tx§.
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
90 c G. Shin 2007
t« x§, !Twˆt« x§?
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
c G. Shin 2007 91
=V 12 »Î
2 HOW MUCH? HOW FAR?
The following table contains basic express bus travel information, giving fares, distance and journey
times between Seoul and a number of major Korean cities. Read the table and make sentences
according to the Examples. The fares are in won, and the distances are in kilometers.
	  j´P
X©Š — Ž­p´P 70,000 441 5.30
X©Š — ØIÄ‘¨ 60,000 363 4.30
X©Š — 7‰† 55,000 297 4.00
X©Š — 7½õ 28,000 153 2.00
X©Š — ½õ‘¨ 37,000 233 3.30
X©Š — ':H‘¨ 50,000 320 4.00
X©Š — 3FV?ÙÁ 42,000 232 4.00
Examples
How much ..?: X©ŠVX ...  	 2ÀWx§?
How far ..?: X©ŠVX ...   2À ×éx§?
How long ..?: X©ŠVX ...  /
Æ j´PN†‹ +ñÀOx§?
92 c G. Shin 2007
t« x§, !Twˆt« x§?
3 Jumbled Conversation
This is a reading comprehension exercise. Following is a scrambled conversation between Ji-Su and
David. Unscramble it and write it in the space provided. Ji-Su has just met David after not seeing him
for a few days.
David: 9½õ !Twˆ¥ü½ x§.
David: 63, x¦8j´Pn´PVx§.
David: 61V x§.
¨: x§D†‹ #T+N;Vx§?
¨: #T x§?
David: 63, ©ëR 61x§.
¨: /
Æ ½õ !Twˆ¥ü½ x§?
¨:  ˆ8x§?  ˆÛíÁ, ¡ëZ ¡ëT.
¨: x¦8j´Pn´PVx§.
David: 63,  ˆ.Â.
4 Using the particle s¦
This exercise is to help you practice using the particle s¦. Answer B’s question in each example
positively using the particle -s¦. Number one has been done for you.
1. A: 4÷¨pÙˆ uæˆÈ¥ü½ ª”Bx§.
B: ßîď¨pÙˆx§?
s—, a.U·@8e ~±n´o).
2. A: @­pÙˆ w´‡QT¥ëR©÷Š O[Ž­Bx§.
B: ¨óÀtøˆ¥ëRvÞˆx§?
3. A: w´‡QTV ¡ë^.oP#Tx§.
B: ¨óÀtøˆVpÙˆx§?
4. A: ©óÂVX $Ü€½9N½¥ü½ Bx§.
B: …ø9N½pÙˆx§?
5. A: ½õ ‘¨¥ëRV p´PV x§.
B: ¨pÙˆx§?
6. A: jBõKô‘¨¥ü½ §ë^#Tx§.
B: ÝîÄKô‘¨pÙˆx§?
7. A: §Šq„¥ü½ ‘¨s눆ÿ#Tx§.
B: HJľõvÞˆx§?
8. A: q„:GV¥ü½ ª”Bx§.
B: ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆx§?
9. A: w´‡QTp¼¾s눩÷Š ¨óÐ#Tx§.
B: D„ŽQTp¼¾sëˆvÞˆx§?
10. A: ©ëT¥ü½ ‘¨s눆ÿ#Tx§.
B: n´P‹¨pÙˆx§?
c G. Shin 2007 93
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5 Which bus goes where?
The table below lists the starting point and the terminus for a number of bus routes. Refer to it to
answer the questions that follow.
QUESTION: 83½õ !TwˆpÙˆ #T x§?
ANSWER: 83½õ !TwˆpÙˆ @Eá x§.
#TX #T?
83½õ X©Šßî½ @Eá
53½õ ÜîÄµŽ µŽ7sëˆ
142½õ X©Š7@}†q… 3NÁ}¦O[@}
342½õ D‚Žt« 1 4FSp´P
586½õ áZû¨ë[ ¾õ;V7@}†q…
7½õ @Eá Eá
39½õ p¼¾;V5¨ë[ q„B‚‡!Twˆ'N¢ëR
23½õ q„7¨ë[ µŽ7sëˆ;FV
1. 586½õ !TwˆpÙˆ #TX «½¦ëRBx§?
2. EáV pÙˆ !TwˆpÙˆ /
ƽõVx§?
3. 39½õ !TwˆpÙˆ #T x§?
4. 23½õ !TwˆpÙˆ #TX #T x§?
5. EáV pÙˆ !TwˆpÙˆ #TX «½¦ëRBx§?
6. @EáV pÙˆ !TwˆpÙˆ /
ƽõVx§?
7. 586½õ !TwˆpÙˆ ¾õ;V7@}†q…V x§?
8. 142½õ !TwˆpÙˆ #T x§?
94 c G. Shin 2007
t« x§, !Twˆt« x§?
6 THE STREET MAP
Look at the street map below and fill in the blanks. Number one has been done for you as an
example.
1. ~³Î1÷vÞˆ vÞˆT¸û s« V ¨óÌ#Tx§.
2. vވ
BƒŒ 2
ÉV ¨óÌ#Tx§.
3. ßî½vÞˆ ~³Î1÷ V ¨óÌ#Tx§.
4. vÞˆ vÞˆT¸û x¦rã»Né‡ 2
ÉV
¨óÌ#Tx§.
5. vÞˆ ­ZQT ñíV ¨óÌ#Tx§.
6. O[EávÞˆ ~³Î1÷ V ¨óÌ#Tx§.
7. ßî½vÞˆ O[Eá V ¨óÌ#Tx§.
8. È*;FV§óÀvÞˆO[Eá V ¨óÌ#Tx§.
9. LôÈ*àíÁvÞˆ ~³Î1÷ V ¨óÌ#Tx§.
10.
BƒŒvÞˆ C¹‹9N½àíÁ V
¨óÌ#Tx§.
11. pÙˆ ÝîÄEá 7FWvÞˆ¾õV ¨óÌ#Tx§.
12. XàíÁvÞˆ C¹‹9N½àíÁ V ¨óÌ#Tx§.
13. #UT¸ûpÙˆ ©(N V ¨óÌ#Tx§.
14. CFV©óÂvÞˆ O[Eá V ¨óÌ#Tx§.
15. vÞˆ ­ZQT co¬Né‡ 2
ÉV
¨óÌ#Tx§.
c G. Shin 2007 95
=V 12 »Î
7 Conversation Activities
This is a conversation exercise about commuting and travelling in general. Form a small group and
practise asking and answering the following questions.
Travelling to class
©óÂVX @}†q…  2À ×éx§?
@}†q…VpÙˆ #T:Ê5 Âx§?
@}†q…VpÙˆ /
Æ ½õ !Twˆ/½õ	t« Âx§?
	 2ÀWx§?
©óÂVX @}†q… /
Æ j´PN†‹ +ñÀOx§?
x¦£òŠvÞˆ /
Æ V ©óÂVX «½¦ëR†ÿ#Tx§?
@}†q…VpÙˆ /
Æ V s¦}††ÿ#Tx§?
©óÂVpÙˆ /
Æ V ¤Šx§? (¤Š- = to return)
Your Recent Trips
Have you taken any trips lately – local? interstate? overseas? See if you can recount the details of
the trip by using the following sentences.
1. k´P ..........V ..........V
¡ë^.oP#Tx§.
2. ..........(xˆ)t« ¡ë^.oP#Tx§.
3. ..........
q„ ¡ë^.oP#Tx§.
4. ..........V ©ó©÷Š +N¢ë^#Tx§.
5. .......... ..........j´P +ñÀÞîÌ#Tx§.
6. ..........VX ..........†ÿ#Tx§.
7. ..........VpÙˆ ..........j´P/¨óÀ/‘¨¨óÀ
¨óÌ2Ì#Tx§.
8. ..........VpÙˆ ..........¨óÀŽ­'N
..........¨óÀ ¨óÌ2Ì#Tx§.
9. ..........V ..........©÷Š/¥ü½
+N¢ë^#Tx§.
10. ..........V ©óÂV ¤Š.oP#Tx§.
1. Last ...... I went to ...... (use ‘¨¥ëR, days of the
week, or months of the year)
2. I went there by ......
3. I went there with ......
4. I left home at ...... o’clock.
5. It took ...... hours to get to ......
6. (What did you do when you got there – did
you have a meal, for example?)
7. We were there for ...... hours/days/weeks.
8. We were there from ...... to ...... (Give dates.)
9. We left there at ...... o’clock.
10. We arrived home at ......
96 c G. Shin 2007
t« x§, !Twˆt« x§?
8 Making Dialogue
In small groups, make a dialogue to fit the following situation.
1. You want to go to the beach tomorrow, and you want your friends to go with you. You ask them
what they’re doing, and would they like to go to the seaside.
2. They say yes, suggest you all go together, and ask if you’ve got a car.
3. You say you have, and ask whereabouts should you all meet.
4. They suggest the station, and ask where you’re planning to go.
5. You say Seaview (Ž®) Beach is good.
6. They ask how far is it?
7. You tell them it’s twenty kilometres, and that it should take half an hour to get there.
8. They ask you what time you should leave.
9. You suggest nine o’clock, and that you’ll arrive at the beach at nine thirty.
10. Perhaps because all these details make you sound like a tour guide, they ask, as a joke, how much
the fare will be.
11. You answer twenty dollars a person!
c G. Shin 2007 97
=V 13 »Î
13 D‚‡
1 Reading Practice
Read the following conversation and answer the questions that follow. In the conversation Annie and
her friend ¥¾ßîÄ are talking about their families.
¥¾ßîÄ: 9N½‰† u¦‹¨ /
Æ 6FSVx§?
Annie: u¦‹¨ 63 6FSVx§. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆx§?
¥¾ßîÄ: u¦‹¨ à 6FSVx§.
Annie: #TN
q„ !T
q„ €¦ Šž ¨óÌ#Tx§?
¥¾ßîÄ: 63, x¦ 
, ½õ 
 ¨óÌ#Tx§.
Annie: x¦pÙˆ SX ÿm® Bx§?
¥¾ßîÄ: x¦pÙˆ SX vÞˆT¸ûV 0x§.
Annie:  ˆ8x§? ½õpÙˆx§?
¥¾ßîÄ: ½õpÙˆ 7@}†MûVx§.  ˆ½õ7L, pÙˆ Ž­u¦4NÁ 5;Vx§?
Annie: 63, 5;Vx§.
¥¾ßîÄ: ½õ, x¦pÙˆx§?
Annie: 2×#Tx§. 4FSµŽMû 
 ¨óÌ#Tx§. SX q„¹Ž@}†q…V 0x§.
QUESTIONS
1. pÙˆ 9N½‰† /
Æ 6FSVx§?
2. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆ 9N½‰† /
Æ 6FSVx§?
3. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆ åAû=V9 /
Æ ¨óÌ#Tx§?
4. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆ x¦ ¨óÌ#Tx§? ½õpÙˆx§?
5. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆ µŽMû ¨óÌ#Tx§?
6. pÙˆ Ž­u¦4NÁ 5;Vx§?
7. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆx§?
8. pÙˆ x¦ ¨óÌ#Tx§? ½õpÙˆx§?
9. pÙˆ µŽMû ¨óÌ#Tx§?
10. ¥¾ßîÄÂÔ x¦pÙˆ SX ÿm® Bx§? ½õpÙˆx§?
11. ÂÔ µŽMûvÞˆ SX ÿm® Bx§?
98 c G. Shin 2007
D‚‡
2 The Family Tree
Look at this family tree and describe the relationship between the pairs of people that follow.
Example
ßîÄÈ — Þ¶ÄÈ =⇒ s—·@U _
—·@q@ sSCno).
1. ÜîÄ= — Þ¶ÄÈ
2. 8FOC¶Ž — ¨È
3. r¼õ¨ — ßîÄÈ
4. Þ¶ÄÈ — ¨È
5. r¼õ¨ — 8FOC¶Ž
6. ¨È — Þ¶ÄÈ
7. Ä%ÜîÄCµ‡ — ¨È
8. Ä%ÜîÄCµ‡ — 8FOC¶Ž
9. ÜîÄ= — Ä%ÜîÄCµ‡
10. Ä%ÜîÄCµ‡ — r¼õ¨
11. ¨È — 8FOC¶Ž
12. ßîÄÈ — ßîď¨
13. Þ¶ÄÈ — 8FOC¶Ž
14. r¼õ¨ — ¨È
15. ßîÄÈ — r¼õ¨
16. ßîď¨ — r¼õ¨
17. ßîď¨ — Þ¶ÄÈ
18. r¼õ¨ — ßîď¨
c G. Shin 2007 99
=V 13 »Î
3 How long since ...?
Transform the following sentences according to the Example. In this Example we are assuming that
the conversation took place in 2003.
Example
3NÁ¥¾MûÂÔ °ëRvÞˆ 1988獾V @#T¢ë^#Tx§.
Mr Kim’s daughter was born in 1988.
=⇒
Dƒ_S_˜q@ -bnC  n

EJERCICIOS KOREANOS

  • 1.
    =V 1 »Î 1q¼õ 1 Practising Korean vowel sounds In the list below all the twenty-one Korean vowels are given with approximate Australian English equivalents. As we will learn in the next unit, each of the twenty-one Korean vowels – not just ‘single’ vowels (ie a, e, o, u and i) but also ‘complex’ vowels (eg ae, ya, wa, etc) – is represented as a different vowel symbol in Hangeul. Let’s practise the sounds. a as in part ae as in cable ya as in yard yae as in yabby eo as in pot e as in pet yeo as in yonder ye as in yet o as in port wa as in wonder wae as in wag oe as in wet yo as in your u as in do wo as in wobble we as in wet wi as in weeds yu as in few eu as in urn ui Say Ernie without the n (and without moving the lips) i as in feet 2 c G Shin 2006
  • 2.
    q¼õ 2 Practising Koreanconsonant sounds What are the consonants that you have in your language but not in Korean? g kk as in sky n d tt as in stop r/l m b pp as in spot s ss ng as in sing j jj ch k t p h • As mentioned in the main text, b, d, g and j are pronounced the same as in English, except when they occur sentence-initially. In this case they are pronounced as p, t, k and ch, respectively. Now practise reading the following expressions. ban-chan a-beo-ji don pa-do side dishes father money waves gom a-gi Jo-a-yo a-ju bear baby That’s good! very much • Korean r is a ‘flap’ r. Although replacing r with English r does not bring about a meaning change, you should know r is produced by a single, quick flap of the tongue against the alveolar ridge – the inward projection of the gums between the upper teeth and the hard palate. Ask your instructor for a demonstration. Now practise. sa-rang gu-reum da-ri Geu-rae-yo love clouds bridge That’s right! • Korean l is a ‘retroflex’ l. You produce a retroflex l sound in the same manner as you do an l, except that your tongue tip should be placed on the hard palate, not at the back of the upper teeth. Now practise. sal-lim Mol-la-yo Dal-la-yo gil house keeping I don’t know. It’s different. road • A doubled consonant, ie pp, tt, ss, jj or kk, indicates tensed pronunciation. In English tensed consonants do not constitute separate sound categories for distinguishing between words, but tensed consonants do exist. For example, the p, t and k sounds in s clusters are tensed consonants – such as spot, stop and sky. Now practise. bul ppul pul fire horn grass dal ttal tal the moon daughter mask geun kkeun keun root string large Ja-yo Jja-yo Cha-yo I’m sleeping. It’s salty! It’s cold! sal ssal flesh rice • By convention, s and ss shall be pronounced respectively as sh and ‘tensed’ sh (ie sh with a stronger hiss) if they are followed by i or y. When you read si, for instance, you should not read it in the same way of naming the English letter c but as she. si-heom si Sim-sim-hae-yo Me-i-seun-ssi exam peom I’m bored! Mr Mason c G Shin 2006 3
  • 3.
    =V 1 »Î 3Understanding basic Insa Match each of the Korean Insa expressions on the left with its English equivalent on the right. An-nyeong-ha-se-yo? • • Come in. An-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo. • • Good-bye (to someone staying behind). An-nyeong-hi gye-se-yo. • • Good-bye (to someone leaving). An-jeu-se-yo. • • Hello. How are you? Ban-gap-sseum-ni-da. • • See you again. Deu-reo-o-se-yo. • • I’m sorry. Eo-seo o-se-yo. • • It’s O.K. Gam-sa-ham-ni-da. • • Pleased to meet you. Gwaen-cha-na-yo. • • Take a seat. Mi-an-ham-ni-da. • • Sorry I’m late. Ne. • • Thank you. Neu-jeo-seo mi-an-ham-ni-da. • • Thank you. Tto man-na-yo. • • Welcome. Go-map-sseum-ni-da. • • Yes. 4 c G Shin 2006
  • 4.
    q¼õ 4 Reading basicInsa aloud Read aloud each of the Korean Insa expressions. • An-nyeong-ha-se-yo? • An-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo. • An-nyeong-hi gye-se-yo. • An-jeu-se-yo. • Ban-gap-sseum-ni-da. • Deu-reo-o-se-yo. • Eo-seo o-se-yo. • Gam-sa-ham-ni-da. • Go-map-sseum-ni-da. • Gwaen-cha-na-yo. • Jon Me-i-seun-i-e-yo. • Ka-il-li Wo-keo-ye-yo. • Mi-an-ham-ni-da. • Ne. • Neu-jeo-seo mi-an-ham-ni-da. • Tto man-na-yo. c G Shin 2006 5
  • 5.
    =V 1 »Î 5Exchanging Insa This exercise is to help you respond appropriately to Insa. Firstly, cover Column 2. Then read the first item in Column 1 and try to think of an appropriate response. When you have your response, uncover the first item in Column two and check your response. Now, repeat for the rest of Column 1. Column 1 Column 2 1. An-nyeong-ha-se-yo? Ne, an-nyeong-ha-se-yo? Ka-il-li wo-keo-ye-yo. YOUR NAME-ye-yo or -i-e-yo. 2. Ban-gap-sseum-ni-da. Ne, ban-gap-sseum-ni-da. 3. Neu-jeo-seo mi-an-ham-ni-da. Gwaen-cha-na-yo. Ne, gam-sa-ham-ni-da. 4. Gam-sa-ham-ni-da. or Gwaen-cha-na-yo. 5. An-nyeong-ha-se-yo? Ne, an-nyeong-ha-se-yo? Ne, go-map-sseum-ni-da. 6. Go-map-sseum-ni-da. or Gwaen-cha-na-yo. Ne, gam-sa-ham-ni-da. 7. Deu-reo-o-se-yo. or Ne, go-map-sseum-ni-da. Ne, an-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo. 8. An-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo. or Ne, an-nyeong-hi gye-se-yo. 9. An-nyeong-hi gye-se-yo. Ne, an-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo. 10. Eo-seo o-se-yo. An-nyeong-ha-se-yo? 11. Tto man-na-yo. Ne, tto man-na-yo. 12. Mi-an-ham-ni-da. Gwaen-cha-na-yo. Ne, gam-sa-ham-ni-da. 13. An-jeu-se-yo. or Ne, go-map-sseum-ni-da. 6 c G Shin 2006
  • 6.
    q¼õ 6 Practise: Whatdo you say? Following is a series of social situations. Discuss with your instructor what would be an appropriate response. Note that in some cases no substantial response may be required. 1. A waitress brings your order. 2. The taxi-driver gives you your change. 3. The taxi-driver reminds you that you’ve left your umbrella in the cab. 4. The class starts at 11.00 a.m, you come at 11.20 a.m. 5. There is a knock, you open the front door and it is your friend. 6. You made a phone call on behalf of a friend who cannot speak English and are now responding to his thanks. 7. You finish a brief conversation with a friend whom you’ve met by chance on the street. 8. You greet your teacher. 9. The waiter brings your drink, it is not what you remember ordering, the waiter offers to change it, but you decide to keep it. 10. Your Korean class ends. Your teacher says “Thank you”, you say to your teacher ... 11. The cashier gives you your change and thanks you for your custom. 12. A Korean friend makes a phone-call on your behalf to resolve a problem. c G Shin 2006 7
  • 7.
    =V 1 »Î 7Hangeul preview: Consonants and vowels Here are the lists of Korean consonants and vowels again, but this time with Hangeul letters as well. We invite you to have a close look at them, and discuss with your fellow students how tensed consonants and ‘complex’ vowels are represented in Hangeul in particular. Consonants g kk as in sky n d tt as in stop r/l m b pp as in spot s ss ng as in sing j
  • 8.
    jj ch k t p h Vowels a a as in part ae b as in cable ya c as in yard yae d as in yabby eo e as in pot e f as in pet yeo g as in yonder ye h as in yet o i as in port wa j as in wonder wae k as in wag oe l as in wet yo m as in your u n as in do wo o as in wobble we p as in wet wi q as in weeds yu r as in few eu s as in urn ui t Say Ernie without the n (and without moving the lips) i u as in feet 8 c G Shin 2006
  • 9.
    q¼õ 8 Hangeul preview:Basic Insa Below are basic Insa expressions again, written in Hangeul as well. Using the lists of Hangeul letters above, ascertain as much as possible how Hangeul letters are used. Do this exercise with your fellow students. In particular, do you see where spaces are? Do you see how ‘strangely’ the letter is used? Are there any discrepancies between what is romanised and what is written in Hangeul? • An-nyeong-ha-se-yo? q´PÜ€Ä ;Vx§? • An-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo. q´PÜ€Ä ;Vx§. • An-nyeong-hi gye-se-yo. q´PÜ€Ä 5;Vx§. • An-jeu-se-yo. :F`xˆ;Vx§. • Ban-gap-sseum-ni-da. o´‡¡ëTB†Œ. • Deu-reo-o-se-yo. ¤÷Š#Tx¦;Vx§. • Eo-seo o-se-yo. #TX x¦;Vx§. • Gam-sa-ham-ni-da. 3FS®‹. • Go-map-sseum-ni-da. q„¥ëTB†Œ. • Gwaen-cha-na-yo. ÆI¬ª˜x§. • Jon Me-i-seun-i-e-yo. wóˆ 9RuÙˆVx§. • Ka-il-li Wo-keo-ye-yo. ¨óÀ ö Wx§. • Mi-an-ham-ni-da. q´P®‹. • Ne. 63. • Neu-jeo-seo mi-an-ham-ni-da. =†#TX q´P®‹. • Tto man-na-yo. €¦ n´Px§. c G Shin 2006 9
  • 10.
    =V 2 »Î 2w´‡¢íW (1) 1 Writing Hangeul letters Write all the Hangeul consonants and vowels in the table below. Consonants g kk n d tt r/l m b pp s ss [ ]/ng j jj ch k t p h Vowels a ae ya yae eo e yeo ye o wa wae oe yo u wo we wi yu eu ui i 10 c G Shin 2006
  • 11.
    w´‡¢íW (1) 2 Vowelletters Re-group the following vowel letters, according to their shapes: vertical, horizontal or mixed. Give their pronunciations (ie romanisations) as well. a t i c e j k g m u d p b f n h l o r s q Vertical Vowel Letters Horizontal Vowel Letters Mixed Vowel Letters c G Shin 2006 11
  • 12.
    =V 2 »Î 3Consonant letters Give the pronunciation (ie romanisation) of each of the following consonant letters.
  • 13.
    12 c GShin 2006
  • 14.
    w´‡¢íW (1) 4 ReadingHangeul syllables (1) The following list of words are commonly used English words in Korean. They should not be regarded as foreign words, but rather as Korean words of foreign origin. Your task is identify, or guess, what they are. 5:NÁ 9Ru¦ ;V 8Rsøˆ |«|« #T
  • 15.
  • 16.
  • 17.
    ‘©wˆ x¦ 9R q¼õ'NŽ®}ˆ c G Shin 2006 13
  • 18.
    =V 2 »Î 5Reading Hangeul syllables (2) Here are more Korean words of foreign origin. Your task is identify, or guess, what they are. wˆ¡ˆ6NÁ =yˆ wˆ?/ yˆ }¦¡ˆ }ˆm¼õ'N wˆt¼õ t«¾õ x¦®Úõ ­wˆ !T'N #T ? Qø(Nwˆ Šž sˆ Šžsˆ x¦tÞˆ ùÓyˆ P¸ø
  • 19.
  • 20.
    w´‡¢íW (1) 6 ReadingHangeul syllables (3) Here are more Korean words of foreign origin. Your task is identify, or guess, what they are.
  • 21.
  • 22.
    q¼õ½õ N rœ ­ zý» 'Nžñû ¬ }¦wˆ'N }ˆt« ˆJø ¹‹ ­ yˆ wˆ}¦zˆ NÁ c G Shin 2006 15
  • 23.
    =V 2 »Î 7Reading Hangeul syllables (4) Below are some English first names in Hangeul. Tell us what they are. wóˆ
  • 24.
    'N gBõ r¼õ =V:NÁwˆ¨r´‡ t«!T|ˆ ¡ˆwˆu¼õ p¼¾ Sø |« t«o¼õ y¦x¦ t«!T|ˆ =V 7Lsˆ %`sˆ Vsˆösˆ
  • 25.
  • 26.
    w´‡¢íW (1) 8 ReadingHangeul syllables (5) Below are some Korean surnames. Read them aloud, and see if you know any Koreans with these surnames. 3FV q„ ':A ‰† ¬ 3NÁ 4FS rœ Œ® sëˆ n¼¾ 8FO 8FV : Lô ¾õ X Þ¶Ä uóˆ B‚Ž p¼¾ 9NÁ q´P :GV x¦ ­ ® vìˆ q¼õ :NÁ ;FV ½õ àíÄ y¦ ‘¨ r¼õ Öõ Ä% w´‡ )d IßÁ 4+} c G Shin 2006 17
  • 27.
    =V 3 »Î 3w´‡¢íW (2) 1 Reading more Hangeul syllables (1) The following list of words are commonly used Korean words of foreign origin. Your task is identify, or guess, what they are. !Q(ç (ŽÉÓ' Hsß¼ ÖqtÀÒ
  • 28.
  • 29.
    {9 €92£§ YJáÔ n$àÔ sàÔ9þtXO–ÐÖ¿ n“ ï·ú˜ fqÛ¼ XsàÔ
  • 30.
  • 31.
    “Ee¦ “¦wn= l 18c G Shin 2006
  • 32.
    w´‡¢íW (2) 2 Readingmore Hangeul syllables (2) Here are more Korean words of foreign origin. In the list you’ll find some of English names as well. Identify, or guess, what they are. R 62T'_ ßÌvS Ø•v|¡ím¿‘ ÛÌv:ckP Û!º(8
  • 33.
    ƒç¡ìm}¹ Ã‘ßÇ îm_ ) $ãÑûi@ {¡È‘[k; 8R ÚvS ]Ð
  • 34.
    Ð b) «»S Û!ºPÑ ómÔ×vÑG) ómÔó#  ¼ÿ› ÑQÑ á™Óó#  QÚvÇ b E·x c G Shin 2006 19
  • 35.
    =V 3 »Î 3Reading Hangeul The following list of words contains some examples of countries’ names. Your task is identify, or guess, what they are. uŒX{Œ 63Ü!CK[ewŒ Ž£`Õ¥_AwŒ •gX ¤˜AŒ | {Œ XZ NSœ^ç Â÷@[¨ ºgNS[ PS€Œ€’h ß'CUS {Œà¤˜A aÕNS ôcÓw 63[ ?
  • 36.
    _{ŒS[e ÚhéK[ewŒ Œ‚Ék{Œ ùcÓK[ewŒôcÓW Ùí  xŒ˜¦¶g `×€Œ Q[ v xŒà {ŒASôcÓ 20 c G Shin 2006
  • 37.
    w´‡¢íW (2) 4 Capitalcites ... Match up the following countries with their capital cities. 1. ”¸ØÔJ?s • • s–Ðq 2. ´ú˜YUsr • • u´ 3. ÚÔ|9 • • ×¼o×¼ 4. Û¼J?D!p • • ժ׼ 5. Û¼`…“ • • ~½Ó9q 6. sß¼ • • ÂÒ`…Û¼àÔ 7. sêøÍ • • ÚÔ|9o 8. “•¸W1r • • Û¼:Ÿ¤f.Ë2£§ 9. H • • 10. H • • š¸_þt–Ð 11. Ǩ • • š¸ü 12. {9½™×¼ • • ØÔ 13. —2;êøÍ×¼ • • Ǩ·ú˜µ¡§ÉÒØÔ 14. €9o—2; • • _…K‰êøÍ 15. +ùAo • • ó¡šdç v c G Shin 2006 21
  • 38.
    =V 3 »Î 5Hangeul reading Look at the following secret messages. Your task is to use the ‘Random Hangeul Character Table’ below and translate each of the messages into English. • a4 a2 f6 SPACE a1 d3 b5 • a4 a2 f6 SPACE b1 d3 b5 • d1 a3 c5 f4 b5 • c2 SPACE e2 e1 b5 • c4 b3 SPACE a5 d3 b5 • b2 c4 a5 d3 b5 • b6 SPACE f2 f5 e3 f5 d4 b5 • f5 c3 e4 f5 d4 b5 • d6 a6 d2 SPACE d5 e6 f4 b5 • f1 • c1 c6 f3 b5 • b4 e5 d3 b5 Random Hangeul Character Table a b c d e f 1 5 Æs¬ 3NÁ 63 2 Ü€Ä ¤÷Š €¦ n´P 9R 3 9FV X ¥¾ ;V uÙˆ 4 q´P :F` #T V ßîÄ W 5 x¦ x§ ­ ö xˆ 6 ¨óÀ wóˆ ª˜ 22 c G Shin 2006
  • 39.
    w´‡¢íW (2) 6 WritingHangeul syllables Write the following Insa expressions from Unit 1 in Hangeul. Note that in each box only one syllable is to be written. Also, pay attention to spacing where applicable, and put the relevant punctuation mark at the end as well. 1. An-nyeong-ha-se-yo? 2. Eo-seo o-se-yo. 3. An-nyeong-hi ga-se-yo. 4. An-nyeong-hi gye-se-yo. 5. Tto man-na-yo. c G Shin 2006 23
  • 40.
    =V 3 »Î 7More Hangeul reading Practise reading some Korean words. They are in general items of Korean food and clothing, for which there are no ready English translations. 3NÁ staple Korean side-dish §Šq„ Korean-style barbecue w´‡Aµ‡ Korean national dress SX 12-string Korean musical instrument ;FV‰† hour-glass-shaped Korean drum v´‡wœ dramatic song-narrative art form ¬ëRE×¾ masked dance art form Lô¨óÀ the ‘hundred days’ – the major celebration of the birth of a child. i‹w¡ëT a person’s sixtieth birthday – the major celebration in a person’s life. 7FO+ñÀ cloudy rice wine ·‡ Korean board game – ‘go’ in Japanese wœ‘¨ distilled Korean liquor 9¹Œ knot-tying handicraft ’­Þ¶½ the Autumn Moon festival – the most significant festival day in Korea jU traditional Korean horsehair hat Romanisations: Gimchi, Bulgogi, Hanbok, Gayageum, Janggu, Pansori, Talchum, Baegil, Hwangap, Makgeolli, Baduk, Soju, Maedeup, Chuseok, and Gat. 24 c G Shin 2006
  • 41.
    w´‡¢íW (2) 8 Wordsquares All but one of the countries in the box below can be found in the word square below, if you read vertically or horizontally. Which one is it? Australia Bangladesh Brazil Colombia France Grenada Guinea Hungary Liberia Mali Mexico New Zealand Pakistan Panama Poland Saudi Arabia Sri Lanka Sweden Tonga Yugoslavia ª — ; 2 _ — C –C n
  • 42.
    - ¯ p8 `e 2 FC n C [ 8… [ xC °e 2C Z o) K– =e ¥R ¹ — 2C Z
  • 43.
    7R = F3 n
  • 44.
    =e nC o) 7–¹R Ab 2C ¦™ 2 $e KS 2C – C-e G n
  • 45.
    n « ZC Z p, C n 2 FC n 7– AH ZC — Z 7‚ nC 8 }Dc 7T [ r2 #T º™ ´C n
  • 46.
    sR œe 8…FC n R — n o) c G Shin 2006 25
  • 47.
    =V 4 »Î 4#T x§? 1 Places where we go ... (1) What do we call each of the following places in Korean? Choose a ‘name’ from the list in the box below. 3FVÂÔ§óÀ O[@} 7@}†q… s¦XdB XàíÁ 61 ßî½ ­ZQT vÞˆT¸û ©óÂ
  • 48.
  • 49.
    #T x§? 2 Placeswhere we go ... (2) What do we call each of the following places in Korean? Choose a ‘name’ from the list in the box below. O[Eá q…§óÀ ST;FV LôÈ*àíÁ !Twˆ'N¢ëR ÝîÄEá x¦5 ©(NµÃ ;FV C¹‹9N½àíÁ @}†q… c G Shin 2006 27
  • 50.
    =V 4 »Î 3Crossword Try this crossword. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 ACROSS 3. library 5. student dining hall 8. “He/she takes an exam” 9. inside the department store 10. airport 11. “He/she goes” 12. hospital DOWN 1. university 2. restaurant 4. book shop 6. “He/she writes” 7. “He/she telephones” 8. to city, downtown 10. park 28 c G Shin 2006
  • 51.
    #T x§? 4 Pairwork: Question Answer Do this exercise in pairs, practising asking, and answering to, a question as shown in the example below. If you take the A’s role, cover Column B, and ask a question: Are you going to · · ·? using the picture cue provided. If you take the B’s role, cover Column A, listen carefully what A asks, and respond: No. I’m going to · · · using the picture cue provided. EXAMPLE A B @}†q…V x§? x§, ©óÂV x§. A B A B 1. 1. 7. 7. 2. 2. 8. 8. 3. 3. 9. 9. 4. 4. 10. 10. 5. 5. 11. 11. 6. 6. 12. 12. c G Shin 2006 29
  • 52.
    =V 4 »Î 5Making a Statement and Asking a Question in the Polite Informal Style Attach -x§/-#Tx§, ie the Polite Informal ending, to each of the following verb stems. Explain what rule you have applied to get the answer. Then, practise making a statement or asking a question by changing the intonation pattern. • - • n´P- • ;FS- • v¦- • åZøv¦- • x¦- • £Š- • ¤ˆ- • - • Üí½- • ¨óÐ- • - • O[Ž­ - • B„‡=V - • 9N½ - • vëˆµŽ - • - • ½õÈ* - 30 c G Shin 2006
  • 53.
    #T x§? 6 Whatare they doing? Tell us what the person or persons in each of the picture cues are doing in Korean. x§. O[Ž­Bx§. £Šx§. Ox§. n´Px§. Üí½#Tx§. Àx§. B„‡=VBx§. åZøÀx§. 9N½Bx§. -hx§. Âx§. v눵ŽBx§. Bx§. ¨óÐ#Tx§. ;FSx§. ½õÈ*Bx§. c G Shin 2006 31
  • 54.
    =V 4 »Î 7óê Bx§? Tell us what the persons below are doing. Number 1 has been done for you. 1 2 3 4 qo). 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 32 c G Shin 2006
  • 55.
    #T x§? 8 Pairwork: Question Answer Practise asking, and answering to, a question as shown in the example below. Do this exercise in pairs. If you take the A’s role, cover Column B, and ask questions in Column A. If you take the B’s role, cover Column A, listen carefully what A asks, and respond using the picture cue provided. EXAMPLE A O[Ž­Bx§? B x§, £Šx§. A B A B 1. x§? 1. 7. Àx§? 7. 2. óê Bx§? 2. 8. Üí½#Tx§? 8. 3. O[Ž­Bx§? 3. 9. B„‡=VBx§? 9. 4. v눵ŽBx§? 4. 10. óê Bx§? 10. 5. ¨óÐ#Tx§? 5. 11. ½õÈ*Bx§? 11. 6. óê Bx§? 6. 12. £Šx§? 12. c G Shin 2006 33
  • 56.
    =V 5 »Î 5=‚‡ ‘¨;Vx§. 1 Things we drink/eat ... What do we call each of the following items in Korean? Choose a ‘name’ from the list in the box below. »Î¨óÀ »Î =‚‡ Kô‘¨ ¦Š : »Î ¨Š x¦®Úõ ­® ‘¨wˆ
  • 57.
    ¬Š }¦s¦ IßÁ 34c G Shin 2006
  • 58.
    =‚‡ ‘¨;Vx§. 2 Categories Thisis a vocabulary exercise. Put the words in the box under the correct category heading. Liquor/Beverage Fruits Places 3FS q…§óÀ ¢W ST;FV °ëR 8Ru¦63sˆ 7FO+ñÀ 9§óÀ ‘¨wˆ Aµ‡B„Ž vˆcBõ x¦5 wœ‘¨ ¨8FO ¨àíĻΠ61 ;FV 9N½Bc ßî½ ‹¨ ©ó }ŠÂ
  • 59.
  • 60.
    =V 5 »Î 3Word Square This is a reading exercise. How many places from the vocabulary list in the previous unit can you find in the word square below? You can look horizontally, vertically and diagonally to find them. x _v ™è /BN †½Ó FG +þA @/ ¥æ |9 [j é¶ Ç© Q ©œ œí †Æ _þv q n š¸ #î  “§ !Q •¸ f ›a é¶ z´ Û¼ ]j “Ér ’ Êê `¦ r ?/ ' K 'Ÿ •@r †Æ Òqt ?/ p û ( Ö¿ “§ õ f ±ú˜ ½© ĺ ^‰ ²DG š¸ H †Æ Ñþ˜ ¹¢¤ y©œ 0py ¥æ Òqt o f ²DG _ q ¯¹ 6£§ d” h p ™è •¸ z´ %i  {©œ z ½+Ë r ©œ ·ú¦ 36 c G Shin 2006
  • 61.
    =‚‡ ‘¨;Vx§. 4 Oddone out Look at the following groups of words and pick the odd one out. Also, explain why it is the odd one. 1. ¢W Aµ‡B„Ž FV ¨8FO ‹¨ }¦s¦ 2. q¼õÖõO[@} 9N½Bc X©Šßî½ rýÀ7LLôÈ*àíÁ 4FS7sëˆ;FV 3FV4FS'N¢ëR 3. =‚‡ 8Ru¦63sˆ wœ‘¨ 9N½Bc ‘¨wˆ ¬Š 4. vÞˆT¸û ­ZQT XàíÁ s¦XdB O[@} 3FVÂÔ§óÀ 5. 5 LôÈ*àíÁ ÝîÄEá C¹‹9N½àíÁ
  • 62.
  • 63.
    q¼õ®ü½ 7. ¨8FO ö }ŠÂ 9N½Bc°ëR 3FS 8. }¦s¦‘¨ öwˆ Kô‘¨ wœ‘¨ 7FO+ñÀ ¦Š c G Shin 2006 37
  • 64.
    =V 5 »Î 5Pair Work: Buying things ... Do this exercise in pairs. In this exercise we practise asking about availability of things in a shop, and if they are available, we also practise asking for them. If you take the shopkeeper’s role, cover the right Column, listen carefully what your partner says, and respond. Things that you have in your shop are listed below. If you take the customer’s role, cover the left Column, and ask your partner if he/she has the things that you need, one by one. If your partner says yes, then ask for it. Things that you need are in the frame below. EXAMPLES 1. Customer:
  • 65.
    ¨óÌ#Tx§? Do youhave coffee? Shopkeeper: 63, ¨óÌ#Tx§. Yes, we do. Customer:
  • 66.
    ‘¨;Vx§. Can Ihave coffee? Shopkeeper: 63, #U ¨óÌ#Tx§. Yes, here you are. Customer: q„¥ëTB†Œ. Thanks. 2. Customer: }¦s¦‘¨ ¨óÌ#Tx§? Do you have wine? Shopkeeper: q´P®‹. }¦s¦‘¨ 2×#Tx§. I’m sorry, we don’t. Things to sell ... IßÁ }¦s¦‘¨ }¦s¦ ö ¬Š
  • 67.
    }ŠÂ }ŠÂ x¦®Úõ wˆ¡ˆ6NÁ 9N½Bc¨àíĻЏ¨8FO wœ‘¨ FV »Î ¦Š 9§óÀ‘¨ »Î 3FS Things to buy ... 38 c G Shin 2006
  • 68.
    =‚‡ ‘¨;Vx§. 6 PureKorean Numbers (1) Match up the following Arabic numbers on the left with pure Korean numbers (ie pronunciations) on the right. Then cover the right column, and read aloud the numbers. 1 • • aà 10 • • à 11 • • ¤Š 12 • • ±ú 13 • • wˆ¦Š 14 • • wˆ¦Šaà 15 • • wˆ¦ŠÃ 16 • • wˆ¦Š¤Š 17 • • wˆ¦Š±ú 18 • • wˆ¦ŠIß¿ 19 • • wˆ¦Š#U-ýÒ 2 • • wˆ¦Š#Uà 20 • • wˆ¦Š¨óÀOY 21 • • wˆ¦Š 22 • • Iß¿ 23 • • #U-ýÒ 24 • • #Uà 25 • • 2 À 26 • • 2 Àaà 27 • • 2 Àà 28 • • 2 À¤Š 29 • • 2 À±ú 3 • • 2 ÀIß¿ 4 • • 2 À#U-ýÒ 5 • • 2 À#Uà 6 • • 2 À¨óÀOY 7 • • 2 À 8 • • ¨óÀOY 9 • • c G Shin 2006 39
  • 69.
    =V 5 »Î 7Pure Korean Numbers (2) All but one of the Pure Korean numbers in the following box can be found in the number table below. Which one is it? Z
  • 70.
    8U ºU´ ´[C-esDc‰ sc_ ºU sDcºU´ Z
  • 71.
    8U nºUn# o sDc‰ na.Un# osc%-e nºUsDc‰ sDcºUn_  sc sc nºUnº‰ [C-en_  sDcºU ºUn# o _ Z
  • 72.
  • 73.
    8UsDc‰ ºUn_  n$UsDc‰ scn_ nºU´ scnº‰ ºU nº‰ Z
  • 74.
  • 75.
    8Un# o 26 27 283 30 31 87 88 9 1 10 19 2 11 98 97 13 14 68 7 70 71 38 24 40 41 74 76 99 12 91 16 34 36 37 44 46 47 48 5 40 c G Shin 2006
  • 76.
    =‚‡ ‘¨;Vx§. 8 RolePlay Study the conversation piece below, and perform a role play with your fellow students. Your role play can be based on this conversation piece or on your own. Waitress: #TX x¦;Vx§. David: ¨àíĻΠ¤Š q„ 9§óÀ ‘¨wˆ ‘¨;Vx§. Waitress: q´P®‹. 9§óÀ ‘¨wˆpÙˆ 2×#Tx§. David:  ˆ8x§? ... ¨óÌ#Tx§? Waitress: 63, IßÁ q„ =‚‡ , q¼õ9FS , »Î ¨óÌ#Tx§. David: »Î nU ¨óÌ#Tx§? Waitress: 63, nU ¨óÌ#Tx§. David:  ˆÛíÁ, ¨àíĻΠ¤Š q„ »Î ‘¨;Vx§. Waitress: 63, 3FS®‹. NOTES: • q„: and •  ˆ8x§?: Is that right? •  ˆÛíÁ: Well, then c G Shin 2006 41
  • 77.
    =V 6 »Î 6 2ÀWx§? 1 Sino-Korean Numbers (1) Read aloud the following Sino-Korean numbers. Alternatively, you can do this exercise in pairs: one person reads the following Sino-Korean numbers aloud and the other writes down the numbers. When finished, swap roles. 8 3 6 1 9 2 4 7 5 10 70 20 30 10 40 80 60 90 50 100 65 75 45 85 55 5 15 25 35 95 14 89 52 35 47 76 0 23 68 91 2 Sino-Korean Numbers (2) Do the same as above. But this time you’re practising larger numbers. 400 100 900 600 500 700 200 300 800 1,000 3,000 8,000 6,000 1,000 9,000 4,000 2,000 5,000 7,000 10,000 10,000 40,000 70,000 200,000 600,000 900,000 1,000,000 3,000,000 5,000,000 8,000,000 42 c G Shin 2006
  • 78.
    2ÀWx§? 3 Sino-Korean Numbers(3) All but one of the Sino-Korean numbers in the following box can be found in the number table below. Which one is it? Z ™ ‘DcAR ‘DcKH ¯b_D‡AR ZAR , Z‘S ,KH AR KH KHAR ZKHAR ‘Dc_D‡AR ¯b _‚ _D‡ s— o _‚AR u9I _‚KH oAR _‚_D‡AR u9IAR _‚‘SAR nCAR u9IKHAR _D‡AR nC_D‡ u9I_D‡AR nC ‘S u9I_D‡ o‘SAR ‘Dc nCKHAR sDc ‘SAR ¯b‘S 4 9 6 3 0 8 2 7 5 1 20 60 10 700 300 100 900 8,000 1,000 4,000 70,000 30,000 50,000 10,000 60,000 40,000 20,000 800,000 300,000 700,000 100,000 2,000,000 6,000,000 1,000,000 4,000,000 60,000,000 10,000,000 50,000,000 30,000,000 4 Pure Korean Numbers (4) Practise reading the following pure Korean numbers. 3 10 1 9 2 7 4 8 11 5 6 12 20 80 50 30 70 40 90 60 c G Shin 2006 43
  • 79.
    =V 6 »Î 5More Hangeul Reading and Writing ... Have a look at the following words. They include Korean words of English origin, countries’ names, and English first names. As you read through, you will find that at least one of the Hangeul characters in each word is not right – it is upside-down, rotated, etc. Your task is to locate the ‘funny’ character and re-write the word as it is supposed to be. See if you can finish this exercise within two minutes. 44 c G Shin 2006
  • 80.
    2ÀWx§? 6 Grammar: Verb-Ending Eachof the following sentences contains one grammatical mistake. Your task is to underline, and rectify, each of the mistakes. 1. 5Vx§. 14. ‘¨wˆ ¤÷Š;Vx§. 2. q„:GVVx§. 15. w´‡QT#T O[Ž­ x§. 3. »Î¨óÀ ‘¨wˆ yˆ;Vx§. 16. £Š#Tx§. 4. »Î Üí½x§? 17. B„‡=V x§. 5. 7@}†q…V x§? 18. åZøv¦#Tx§? 6. #Tx§. 19. vëˆµŽ x§? 7. qøˆWx§? 20. ¨pÙˆ 9N½ x§? 8. r¼õ ¨óÌx§? 21. ©óÂV x¦#Tx§. 9. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆ ;FS#Tx§? 22. }sëˆWx§. 10. ¨àíĻΠ#Tx§. 23. P¸ôWx§. 11. #U v¦x§. 24. P¸ô ¨óÐx§. 12. ÂÔ 2×x§. 25. ¨óÀ n´Px§? 13. :F`#Tx§. 26. @­pÙˆ ½õÈ* x§? c G Shin 2006 45
  • 81.
    =V 6 »Î 7Making New Words ... Korean nouns usually combine quite freely with each other, and being aware of the combinations can help us to expand our vocabulary at a rapid rate. Look at the following words, and discuss their meanings with your instructor. All of them combine elements from the vocabulary lists we’ve studied so far. • 5©ó • »Î¨óÀ‘¨wˆ • °ëRnU • °ëRwˆ¡ˆ6NÁ • °ëR­® • Kô‘¨ÝîÄ • ¦Š5 • ¦ŠÝîÄ • ÝîÄKô‘¨ • ÝîĐ­® • »Î‘¨wˆ • ¨Š©ó • ­®ÝîÄ • q¼õ9FS • sŒr´‡ • sŒ©ó • }¦s¦‘¨wˆ 46 c G Shin 2006
  • 82.
    2ÀWx§? 8 ¨óÌ#Tx§, 2×#Tx§? Lookat the objects in the frame below and write answers to the questions that follow, depending on whether you find the objects in the frame or not. 1.
  • 83.
    ¨óÌ#Tx§? 2. q„:GV ¨óÌ#Tx§? 3.5 ¨óÌ#Tx§? 4. 5©ó ¨óÌ#Tx§? 5. §Š·Úõ ¨óÌ#Tx§? 6. P¸ô9FV ¨óÌ#Tx§? 7. P¸ô ¨óÌ#Tx§? 8. ©ó ¨óÌ#Tx§? 9. q¼õ9FS ¨óÌ#Tx§? 10. ÝîÄ ¨óÌ#Tx§? 11. ¾õ­óÀ ¨óÌ#Tx§? 12. qøˆ ¨óÌ#Tx§? 13. –¶7{ý» ¨óÌ#Tx§? 14. r¼õ ¨óÌ#Tx§? 15. ¨Š ¨óÌ#Tx§? 16. }sëˆ ¨óÌ#Tx§? c G Shin 2006 47
  • 84.
    =V 6 »Î 9How many of them ... (1) Tell us how many of them there are in Korean. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 10 How many of them ... (2) Translate the following sentences into Korean and write them in Hangeul. 1. a mandarin 6. ten watermelons 11. four persimmons 2. five cats 7. six peaches 12. two bottles of beer 3. two cups of ginseng tea 8. three hamburgers (T¸ø!T) 13. five taxis (Rô) 4. four posters (}¦wˆ'N) 9. seven ice-creams 14. eight dogs 5. three computers (âHÁ•©'N) 10. nine plums 15. a glass of water 48 c G Shin 2006
  • 85.
    2ÀWx§? 11 How muchare they? Tell us how much they are in Korean. Use a unit noun wherever appropriate. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. c G Shin 2006 49
  • 86.
    =V 7 »Î 7w´‡QT#T q…§óÀ 1 On the left of the first row is ... Look at the table below and answer the following questions. Number one has been done for you. 1. 'úGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡V óê ¨óÌ#Tx§? }R sD“n
  • 87.
    o). 2. 'úGJ ªŠvëˆ7LV óê ¨óÌ#Tx§? 3. ¤ŠGJ ªŠ vëˆ7LV P¸ô ¨óÌ#Tx§? 4. ¤ŠGJ ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡V óê ¨óÌ#Tx§? 5. r¼õvÞˆ #T ¨óÌ#Tx§? 6. »ÎpÙˆx§? 7. aÃGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡V óê ¨óÌ#Tx§? 8. ÃGJ ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡V óê ¨óÌ#Tx§? 9. ¥óÈVX ¤ŠGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡V óê ¨óÌ#Tx§? 10. ¥óÈVX ¤ŠGJ ªŠ vëˆ7LVpÙˆx§? 11. ­®pÙˆ #T ¨óÌ#Tx§? 12. 7FO ªŠ co¬Né‡V óê ¨óÌ#Tx§? 50 c G Shin 2006
  • 88.
    w´‡QT#T q…§óÀ 2 What’sthe left of the first row? Do the same as above. This time, however, we are practising ‘identifying’ various places. The expression, eg, the left of the first row, is not used here to designate the location whereon something is, and thus we don’t need to use the particle -V. What we are practising here is simply saying “Where, ie, what place, is the left of the first row?” — “It’s a classroom,” and so on. 1. 'úGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§? (_DcnCno). 2. 'úGJ ªŠ vëˆ7LpÙˆ #TWx§? 3. 'úGJ ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§? 4. ¤ŠGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§? 5. ¤ŠGJ ªŠ vëˆ7LpÙˆ #TWx§? 6. ¤ŠGJ ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§? 7. ±úGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§? 8. ±úGJ ªŠ vëˆ7LpÙˆ #TWx§? 9. ±úGJ ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§? 10. ¥óÈVX ¤ŠGJ ªŠ co¬Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§? 11. ¥óÈVX ¤ŠGJ ªŠ vëˆ7LpÙˆ #TWx§? 12. ¥óÈVX ¤ŠGJ ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§? 13. 7FO ªŠ co¬Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§? 14. 7FO ªŠ vëˆ7LpÙˆ #TWx§? 15. 7FO ªŠ x¦rã»Né‡vÞˆ #TWx§? c G Shin 2006 51
  • 89.
    =V 7 »Î 3Insa revisted: Polite-Formal This exercise is to help you say Insa, and respond, in the Polite-Formal style. Step 1: Cover Column 2 Step 2: Read the first item in Column 1 and try to think of an appropriate response in the polite-formal mode. When you have your response, uncover the first item in Column two and check your response against the response in Item 2. Step 3: Repeat for the rest of Column 1. Note that sometimes no specific response is called for. Column 1 Column 2 1. o´‡¡ëTB†Œ. 63, o´‡¡ëTB†Œ. 2. q´PÜ€Ä §óÂ? 63, q´PÜ€Ä §óÂ? 3. #TXx¦§óÂx¦. — 4. q´P®‹. Æs¬ª˜B†Œ. 5. =†#TX q´P®‹. Æs¬ª˜B†Œ. 63, q´PÜ€Ä 5§óÂx¦. 6. q´PÜ€Ä §óÂx¦. or 63, q´PÜ€Ä §óÂx¦. 7. q´PÜ€Ä 5§óÂx¦. 63, q´PÜ€Ä §óÂx¦. 8. :F`xˆ§óÂx¦. 63, 3FS®‹. 9. €¦ x¦§óÂx¦. 63, q´PÜ€Ä 5§óÂx¦. 52 c G Shin 2006
  • 90.
    w´‡QT#T q…§óÀ 4 Insarevisted: Polite-Informal Now do the same, this time using the polite-informal style. Again, note that sometimes no specific response is called for. Column 1 Column 2 1. q´PÜ€Ä ;Vx§? 63, q´PÜ€Ä ;Vx§? 2. ¤÷Š#T x¦;Vx§. — 3. :F`xˆ;Vx§. — 4. q´PÜ€Ä 5;Vx§. 63, q´PÜ€Ä ;Vx§. 5. q´PBx§. Æs¬ª˜x§. 63, q´PÜ€Ä 5;Vx§. 6. q´PÜ€Ä ;Vx§. or 63, q´PÜ€Ä ;Vx§. 7. #TX x¦;Vx§. — 8. q´PÜ€Ä ;Vx§? 63, q´PÜ€Ä ;Vx§? 9. €¦ x¦;Vx§. 63, q´PÜ€Ä 5;Vx§. 10. =†#TX q´PBx§. Æs¬ª˜x§. c G Shin 2006 53
  • 91.
    =V 7 »Î 5From Polite Informal to Polite Formal (1) Review Pages 42 and 43, and change the style of each of following statements into Polite Formal. 1. 2. 3. Üí½#Tx§. O[Ž­Bx§. s¦ @}†q…V x§. 4. 5. 6. q´PBx§. }¦s¦ ‘¨wˆpÙˆ 2×#Tx§. x§, 2×#Tx§. 7. 8. 9. 63, #U ¨óÌ#Tx§. ‘¨ nU ¨óÌ#Tx§. 63, £Šx§. 10. 11. 12. x§, -hx§. ¨óÀ «óÀt«V 9FS §Š x¦§ó ±Úõ|ˆWx§. à ¬V §óÂ9FSn´P EáVx§. 54 c G Shin 2006
  • 92.
    w´‡QT#T q…§óÀ 6 FromPolite Informal to Polite Formal (2) Review Pages 42 and 43, and change the style of each of following questions into Polite Formal. 1. 2. 3. #T x§? =‚‡ ¨óÌ#Tx§? ¨óÐ#Tx§? 4. 5. 6. Ox§? óê Bx§? óêWx§? 7. 8. 9. »Î¨óÀ ‘¨wˆWx§? nU 2×#Tx§? x¦®ÚõpÙˆ 2ÀWx§? 10. 11. 12. : / Æ 5 ¨óÌ#Tx§? £Šx§? r¼õ / Æ ;FV ¨óÌ#Tx§? c G Shin 2006 55
  • 93.
    =V 7 »Î 7From Polite Informal to Polite Formal (3) Review Pages 42 and 43, and change the style of each of following commands into Polite Formal. 1. 2. 3. wœ‘¨ ‘¨;Vx§. ¨óÐxˆ;Vx§. ;Vx§. 4. 5. 6. O[Ž­ ;Vx§.  ˆÛíÁ, =‚‡ ‘¨;Vx§. »Î¨óÀ sˆ;Vx§. 7. 8. 9. :F`xˆ;Vx§. rœ;Vx§. #TX x¦;Vx§. 10. 11. 12. ;FO ;Vx§. à 5n´P ‘¨;Vx§. ;Vx§. 56 c G Shin 2006
  • 94.
    w´‡QT#T q…§óÀ 8 Crossword Trythis crossword. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 ACROSS 2 “There isn’t/aren’t”; “I don’t have.” (Polite Formal) 4 “Well done!” (Polite Formal) 5 line 7 “All together!” 9 window 10 “Slowly!” 14 “Listen!” (Polite Informal) 15 the right DOWN 1 “There is/are”; “I have.” (Polite Formal) 2 Dictionary form of the verb not have, not be 3 “Once again!” 6 “I have a question.” (Polite Informal) 8 two thousand 11 one thousand one hundred and fifty 12 “Can I have ... please?” (Polite Informal) 13 on the left hand side c G Shin 2006 57
  • 95.
    =V 8 »Î 8x¦–µV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§? 1 What time is it now? (1) Look at the clock faces below, and tell us what time it is in Korean. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 58 c G Shin 2006
  • 96.
    x¦–µV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§? 2What time is it now? (2) Look at the clock faces below, and tell us what time it is. This time use Polite Formal endings. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. c G Shin 2006 59
  • 97.
    =V 8 »Î 3Pure Korean numbers, again Read aloud the following Pure Korean numbers. Alternatively, you can do this exercise in pairs: one person reads the following Pure Korean numbers aloud and the other writes down the numbers. When finished, swap roles. 44 70 1 2 55 66 77 40 50 88 99 19 6 7 46 64 73 82 91 8 9 10 20 30 60 3 4 5 80 90 11 22 33 28 37 12 4 Sino-Korean numbers, again Do the same as above. But this time you’re practising Sino-Korean numbers. 10 20 30 40 50 15 25 35 45 55 5 100 300 1,000 8,000 6,000 9,000 5,000 10,000 40,000 70,000 200,000 600,000 1,000,000 5 Days of the week Re-arrange the following days of the week in order. Put Monday first. SXx§¨óÀ @µ‡x§¨óÀ ¨x§¨óÀ m®x§¨óÀ ¨óÀx§¨óÀ |«x§¨óÀ È*x§¨óÀ 60 c G Shin 2006
  • 98.
    x¦–µV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§? 6x§, ... (1) This exercise is for practising making negative sentences. Answer the following questions in Korean. For each question, use the picture cue provided. Number 1 has been done for you as an example. 1. @}†q…V x§? 2. O[Ž­Bx§? 3. ¬Š Ox§? nCo, ¹F(n sR o). ™¹–n o). 4. 9N½Bx§? 5. »Î Üí½#Tx§? 6. v눵ŽBx§? 7. P¸ô ¨óÌ#Tx§? 8. mõsˆ{ý»Vx§? 9. »ÎWx§? 10. ÂÔ ¨óÌ#Tx§? 11. 5Wx§? 12. FV Üí½#Tx§? 13. ©óÂV x§? 14. ½õÈ*Bx§? 15. £Šx§? c G Shin 2006 61
  • 99.
    =V 8 »Î 7x§, ... (2) Answer the following questions as in Number 1. Use Polite Formal endings. 1. ;FS©ëT? 2. ¨óÐB†Œ? 3. AµŒ? nCo), }‚ sR }†C. ™H,¹†C. 4. §óÂ? 5. B„‡=V®‹? 6. ®‹? 7. vëˆµŽ®‹? 8. Üí½B†Œ? 9. ½õÈ*®‹? 10. n´P¢ëT? 11. 9N½®‹? 12. O[Ž­®‹? 13. M†Œ? 14. D„Œ? 15. ¡ëT? 62 c G Shin 2006
  • 100.
    x¦–µV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§? 8Are you free at 2.00? This is a pair-work exercise. Using each of the clock faces below, exchange a short conversation according to the Example. Example One person asks a question: 2V j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§? The other person then gives a negative answer with a reason, for instance: 2pÙˆ q´P ×éx§. :GOB‚‡ ¨óÌ#Tx§. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. c G Shin 2006 63
  • 101.
    =V 8 »Î 9When are you free? This is a class activity to help you practice asking when people are free. Look at the timetable below and mark with a cross the times in a week when you are usually busy. The Situation: Your Korean class was disrupted last week and your teacher has asked you to find time for an extra class. Various students in your class have various commitments – just as you have, and a time will have to be negotiated. To do this, form a group of four or five and liaise with each other to find a time when everyone is free. Here are some useful phrases. • È*x§¨óÀ x¦½õV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§? Have you got time on Tuesday morning? • È*x§¨óÀV j´P 2×#Tx§. I haven’t got any free time on Tuesday. • 63, Æs¬ª˜x§. Yes, that’s O.K. • È*x§¨óÀ x¦–µ 2 Æs¬ª˜x§? Is 2.00 pm on Tuesday O.K.? • x§, q´P ×éx§. No, it’s no good. - m®x§¨óÀ È*x§¨óÀ ¨x§¨óÀ @µ‡x§¨óÀ SXx§¨óÀ 8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 64 c G Shin 2006
  • 102.
    x¦–µV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§? 10Let’s sing: Arirang There can be few countries in the world where communal singing is more a feature of life than is the case with Korea. Singing is an almost obligatory part of informal partying, and the visitor would be well advised to come prepared to offer a song. Best of all, of course, would be to come with a Korean song, and without doubt the best-known of these is Arirang. Arirang is a folk song, sung on the indigenous Korean five-note scale, and like many folk songs it is not always easy to trace it back in time. It mainly consists of a distinctive chorus with multiple verses which are not always linked in meaning very noticeably to the chorus. What is certain is that it is the most easily recognisable tune in Korea, and well worth taking the time to learn. Chorus – repeat after every verse 6FV 6FV x§ 6FV q„5t« ÙÁ#Tj´P 1) ¥ü½ !Tq„ pÙˆ 4NÁvÞˆ §óÂs¦ søÀ X ¦ëRÝîÄ k´P 2) H×Á獾 vøˆ63 H×Á獾 Âx§ 3FVp´P 9FSÖõV H×Á獾 Âx§ 3) áZûÖõ £òвÚõ 0 Às¦ ¥ëaq„ 61 B†‹²Úõ ¨9NÁs¦ ¥ëa Like many folk songs, the literal meaning of Arirang is not very susceptible to analysis and there is little or no thematic continuity in the verses. Everyone has their own special understanding of what the song really means – our understanding is as follows. The Chorus: The chorus suggests a tone of lament – literally ‘(My love) has gone over the hill.’ Verse 1: (The idea) ‘He’s thrown me over and gone, but he won’t even go ten li before he gets footsore.’ implying that he will come straight back again. Verse 2: (The idea) ‘It’s been a season of plenty all through the land.’ – no discernible connection with Verse 1, but a cheering sentiment in a song that is heavily used as a farming and rice-planting song. Verse 3: (The idea) ‘There are as many stars in the sky as there are sorrows in my heart.’ – a somewhat conventional expression of sentimentalised sorrow. Language Notes: • 6FV: device like ‘tra-la-la’ • q„5: mountain pass • t«: by way of • ÙÁ#Tj´P: has gone over • : me • ¥ü½: object marker • !Tq„: cast aside (and...) • pÙˆ: (one who is) going • 4NÁ: my lord/my love • pÙˆ 4NÁvÞˆ: my love who is going • vÞˆ: topic marker • §óÂ: distance of ten li (approximately 4km) • s¦: even • søÀ X: unable to go • ¦ëRÝîÄ: lameness (‘foot sickness’) • k´P: has occurred, happened • H×Á獾: abundant harvest • : subject marker • vøˆ63: has come! • Âx§: has come • : these • 3FVp´P: mountains and rivers • 9FSÖõ: 3,000 li • 3FVp´P 9FSÖõV: in these 3,000 li of mountains and rivers – poetic reference to Korea • áZûÖõ: azure blue • £òŠ: the sky • ²Úõ: in • 0 À: stars • s¦: also, too • ¥ëaq„: are many (and ...) • : this • 61: my • B†‹²Úõ: in (my) heart • ¨9NÁ: sorrows • ¥ëa: are many c G Shin 2006 65
  • 103.
    =V 9 »Î 9#Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? 1 Where does she come from? Answer the following questions. Number one has been done for you as an example. 1 2 3 #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? µz,nZ
  • 104.
  • 105.
    o). 4 5 6 #TrˆVX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? 7 8 9 #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? 10 11 12 #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? 66 c G. Shin 2006
  • 106.
    #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? 2Is he an Australian? Answer the following questions. Number one has been done for you as an example. 1 2 3 ¬ëR 6FSVx§? N 6FSVx§? ¥ëR8R 6FSVx§? nCo), C-IZ7‚nCno). 4 5 6 m´‡ 6FSVx§?
  • 107.
    wˆu´‡ 6FSVx§? wˆARq¼õ6FSVx§? 7 8 9 q¼õs¦63 6FSVx§? :R|ˆ4FS 6FSVx§? @µŽq„ 6FSVx§? 10 11 12 7n´P 6FSVx§? ¡ˆ 6FSVx§? åZû 6FSVx§? c G. Shin 2006 67
  • 108.
    =V 9 »Î 3Where is it located? (1) Make sentences according to the Example. Example ½õ¥¾/ßîÄQT Question: ½õ¥¾vÞˆ #TV ¨óÌ#Tx§? Response: ½õ¥¾vÞˆ ßîÄQTV ¨óÌ#Tx§. ½õ¥¾vÞˆ ßîÄQTÂÔ ¨s¦Wx§. NOTE: If we want to say that London is the capital city of the UK, we then say “½õ¥¾vÞˆ ßîÄQTÂÔ ¨s¦Wx§.” Here, ÂÔ is the possessive marker, equivalent to ’s or of in English, and is pronounced as e in everyday speech. 1. X©Š/w´‡QT 2. àîÄ:GV/A·‡w´‡ 3. :R;NÄ(A·‡ØIÄ)/D„ŽQT 4. |«{´(µŽØIÄ)/¨óÀtøˆ 5. AR/7n´P 6. 8FVFÚ‡/¨óÀcBõsˆ 7. ¢óÀ/­óÀv¼õ 8. “±¨ëR?×¾}ˆtˆ/¥ëR8R 9. rœ/:R|ˆ4FS 10. tˆ/q¼õs¦63 11. jBõ!T/~³‘¨ 12. ŠŸÅ-À/q¼õs¦ 13. ¨òŠsˆ/
  • 109.
    wˆu´‡ 14. wˆu´‡§Š/'N#T 15. u¦wˆ¡ˆ/N 16.Â9NĽõ/QT 17. :R¥ü½m¼õ/µ‡¨óÀ 18.
  • 110.
    /}ˆ6FVwˆ 19. t«/¬ëR 20. B^ ˆ/63-ýÀm´‡sˆ 4Where is it located? (2) Make sentences according to the example. Examples Big Ben (8N½°Úõ) Question: 8N½°ÚõvÞˆ #TV ¨óÌ#Tx§? Response: ßîÄQT ½õ¥¾V ¨óÌ#Tx§. 1. The Eiffel Tower (VÏ1÷ö) 2. Ayer’s Rock (V#Twˆ?Õº) 3. Disneyland (yˆcBõsˆ) 4. The Great Wall (n´P;FVÞ¶Ä) 5. Mt Fuji (–µp´P) 6. Siberia (:R) 7. The Taj Mahal (®‰) 8. The Colosseum (¬Št«;VC·‹) 9. the Parthenon (
  • 111.
    tˆ@Rpóˆ p¼¾½õ) 10. GoldenGate Bridge (¢WqÞˆ5|ˆ vˆmFÃ) 11. Halong Bay ( ?ÕÁ:R) 12. The Petronas Twin Towers (|ˆHáö) 13. Ancorwat (:FV{¯tˆÂ|ˆ Eá) 14. The Charles Bridge (ª‰wˆ vˆmFÃ) 68 c G. Shin 2006
  • 112.
    #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? 5The street map This is a pair-work exercise. Look at the sketch map below, and practise making questions and answers according to the Example. Example 1 A: o¹U%`V vÞˆT¸û ¨óÌ#Tx§? B: 63, ¨óÌ#Tx§. Example 2 A: o¹U%`V ßî½ ¨óÌ#Tx§? B: x§, 2×#Tx§. Now ask if the following facilities and amenities can be found nearby. 7@}†q… C¹‹9N½àíÁ
  • 113.
    BƒŒ ­ZQT 5 ÝîÄEáST;FV O[Eá @}†q… ©(NµÃ !Twˆ 'N¢ëR v눵Ž;FV c G. Shin 2006 69
  • 114.
    =V 9 »Î 6What floor is it on? The situation: Below is a diagram of a building in a shopping centre. On each floor there are a number of shops and businesses. Someone is asking you about them, and your task is to describe which floor they are located on. Question 1 x¦ 5pÙˆ / Æ EÙÁV ¨óÌ#Tx§? Response x¦ 5pÙˆ x¦ EÙÁV ¨óÌ#Tx§. Translation The video shop is on the 5th floor. Question 2 ST;FVvÞˆx§? Translation And the cinema? NOTES: ¦óÀ5NÄ = building; SK - EÙÁ = the SK-th floor; È*;FV§óÀ = toilette 8 ~³Î1÷ g`@ 7 |ˆFòŠ. $ 6 ST;FV E·x 5 x¦ 5 ? 3 ©(NµÃ 2
  • 115.
    BƒŒ C¹‹9N½àíÁ 1 ­ZQTvÞˆT¸û CULTURAL NOTE: Often there’s no fourth floor on Korean buildings, especially if the building is a hospital. This is because the word for ‘four’ (sa - ) is pronounced in the same way as the word for ‘death’ – and obviously no one wants to spend much time on ‘the death floor’! Extension exercise 1: Think a bit about the building you study Korean in. Which of the following rooms and facilities are to be found in it? Make sentences to describe what floor they’re located on. For example, nC KDc#D—n }S· sD“n
  • 116.
  • 117.
  • 118.
  • 119.
  • 120.
    BƒŒ È*;FV§óÀ 9N½5FV 3FVÂÔ§óÀ XàíÁ5 âHÁ•©'N§óÀ Extension exercise 2: Now try the same activity for the Student Union, or whatever the main building on your campus is called. 9N½5FV s¦XdB XàíÁ ©(NµÃ |ˆFòŠ. ­ZQT ÝîÄEá ST;FV ¨Š©ó x¦5
  • 121.
  • 122.
    #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? 7The menu This is a revision exercise. Printed below is a menu from a coffee shop in Seoul. Imagine that you are describing its contents in Korean for another person, and make sentences as in the Example. Examples
  • 123.
    pÙˆ 8,000EáVx§. O‰ ÃÝ– ·· · · · · · · · · · · 8,000 š{­ ÍQÀA÷ · · · · · · · · · · · · 6,000 š{­ BPO!–) · · · · · · · · · · · · 6,000 š{­ xu¤ÿS · · · · · · · · · · · · 10,000 š{­ }š›ë= · · · · · · · · · · · · 8,000 š{­ ’u’‰ · · · · · · · · · · · · 6,000 š{­ $R¶÷ · · · · · · · · · · · · 7,000 š{­ ——ª}ûæ¶÷ · · · · · · · · · · · · 7,500 š{­ ôQ¶÷ · · · · · · · · · · · · 7,000 š{­ Oý}™¾Ÿuw · · · · · · · · · · · · 10,000 š{­ ÒON÷ÒOŸuw · · · · · · · · · · · · 9,000 š{­ òùõ)O · · · · · · · · · · · · 8,000 š{­ óç~«)”„¶– · · · · · · · · · · · · 12,000 š{­ V™¾Å|–ō · · · · · · · · · · · · 10,000 š{­ ÷–wÅIšæ · · · · · · · · · · · · 8,000 š{­ c G. Shin 2006 71
  • 124.
    =V 9 »Î 8CROSSWORD Try this crossword. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 ACROSS1 in Class 4 India 6 Northeast Asia 11 a little 13 “It’s difficult.” 14 Germany 16 the West 20 Russia 21 ‘canned’ beer (as opposed to ‘bottled’ beer) 23 Which country? DOWN1 capital city 2 Middle East 3 four o’clock 5 nine (a PK number) 7 North Korea 8 The Arabic Language 9 now 10 “It’s easy.” 11 Korea (DPRK) 12 France 15 Japan 17 Ladies and Gentlemen! 18 South America 19 the vicinity 21 Canberra 22 “Please give me ...” 72 c G. Shin 2006
  • 125.
    #Trˆ VX .oP#Tx§? 9Role Play Study the conversation piece below, and perform a role play with your fellow students. Your role play can be based on this conversation piece or on your own. Tae-U: pÙˆ #TrˆVX .oP#Tx§? Annie: ~³‘¨VX .oP#Tx§. Tae-U: ~³‘¨ #TX .oP#Tx§? Annie: 63? Tae-U: ~³‘¨ ... #TX .oP#Tx§? Annie: , 63, sˆVX .oP#Tx§. Tae-U:  ˆ8x§? sˆpÙˆ óêt« ®ÜîÄBx§? Annie: ¢íWFmx§. x¦AR ­wˆ, !T vˆmFÃ, ... sˆpÙˆ #UN t« ®ÜîÄBx§. Tae-U: sˆpÙˆ ’­öx§? Annie: x§, ‘¨ ~ÞÀBx§. sˆV ;N½ q´P ,¤…#Tx§? Tae-U: 63, ;N½ q´P ,¤…#Tx§. Annie: w´‡ ½õ v¦;Vx§. ‘¨ ª”x§. Language Notes: • ~³‘¨ #TX: Where about in Australia • #UN : various kinds (of things) • ;N½ q´P · · ·: haven’t (done ...) yet • Note also how to respond to a negative question in Korean, eg, Aren’t you ...?, Don’t you ...?, etc. Unlike in English, 63 is used to ‘negatively’ disagree, and x§ to ‘positively’ disagree, with the question that has been asked. Thus: sˆV ;N½ q´P ,¤…#Tx§? Haven’t you been to Sydney yet? 63, ;N½ q´P ,¤…#Tx§. No (Lit. Yes), I haven’t. (ie, negative disagreement) x§, ,¤…#Tx§. Yes (Lit. No), I have. (ie, positive disagreement) c G. Shin 2006 73
  • 126.
    =V 10 »Î 10/ Æ V ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§? 1 Dates (1) Practise pronouncing the following Korean dates, then write them down in Hangeul. Note that the Month has been put before the date. Alternatively, you can do this exercise in pairs: one person reads the following dates aloud and the other writes down the numbers. When finished, swap roles. 1.1 3.6 6.8 4.15 1.30 9.13 11.14 12.2 2.22 7.29 7.8 10.31 9.19 7.27 12.12 2.23 8.15 9.9 6.28 5.23 4.17 7.1 12.25 11.22 5.6 12.29 6.5 10.8 5.8 10.10 8.6 9.26 6.16 10.21 3.4 2 Dates (2) Do the same as above. But this time you’re practising years as well. 1919.3.1 1945.8.15 1948.7.17 1950.6.25 1953.7.27 1960.4.19 1961.5.16 1972.7.4 1972.10.17 1979.10.26 1980.5.18 1987.6.29 1988.9.17 1988.10.2 1990.10.3 1997.11.17 2000.1.1 2000.6.15 2002.5.31 2002.6.30 74 c G. Shin 2006
  • 127.
    / Æ V ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§? 3When’s your birthday? This is a questionnaire exercise. Ask as many of your fellow students as you can when their birthdays are and enter them in the grid below Example Question: · · ·, Mû¨óÀ / Æm® Uª*÷Vx§? If, for example, the answer is 7 July Response: 7m® 7¨óÀVx§. ?Ù¾ Mû¨óÀ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Language Note: • ?Ù¾ = name c G. Shin 2006 75
  • 128.
    =V 10 »Î 4The past tense marker (I) Look at the Verb ‘conjugation’ table below, which is incomplete, and your task is to complete it. VST Meaning Polite Informal Statement Polite Informal Statement PRESENT TENSE PAST TENSE 1. - to go x§ ¡ë^#Tx§ 2. v¦- to go and have a look Àx§ ,¤…#Tx§ 3. q„¥ëT- to be grateful q„öx§ q„qº#Tx§ 4. O[Ž­ - to study O[Ž­Bx§ O[Ž­†ÿ#Tx§ 5. Æs¬ª˜- to be all right Æs¬ª˜x§ Æs¬ª˜¨ë^#Tx§ 6. £Š- to play £Šx§ As in 5 7. -ýÂ- to be hot Höx§ As in 3 8. ¤Š- to go back ¤Šx§ As in 1 9. ¤Šx¦- to come back ¤ŠÂx§ As in 2 10. ~ÞÀ - to be warm ~ÞÀBx§ As in 4 11. - to drink Ox§ ÞîÌ#Tx§ 12. n´P- to meet n´Px§ As in 1 13. n´P¤÷Š- to make n´P¤÷Š#Tx§ n´P¤÷Š2Ì#Tx§ 14. ¥ëa- to be many ¥ëax§ As in 5 15. ¥ëR - to speak ¥ëRBx§ As in 4 16. Üí½- to eat Üí½#Tx§ As in 13 17. u¦tˆ- to not know ¦Šx§ ¦Š¤ë^#Tx§ 18. o´‡¡ëT- to be glad (to see you) o´‡öx§ As in 3 19. :­- to learn :öx§ :qº#Tx§ 20. v¦- to see/look at Àx§ As in 2 21. §ëR- to live §ëRx§ As in 5 22. B„‡=V - to do homework B„‡=VBx§ As in 4 23. p°- to be easy õíöx§ As in 18 24. ;FO - to begin ;FOBx§ As in 4 25. åZøv¦- to take an exam åZøÀx§ As in 2 76 c G. Shin 2006
  • 129.
    / Æ V ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§? 5The past tense marker (II) Do the same as above. VST Meaning Polite Informal Statement Polite Informal Statement PRESENT TENSE PAST TENSE 26. 9N½ - to have a meal 9N½Bx§ As in 4 on the previous page 27. ¤ˆ- to write -hx§ Ì#Tx§ 28. ¨ëR- to know ¨ëRx§ As in 5 29. #T:Ê- to be how #TDJx§ #Tˆ#Tx§ 30. #TÞÂ- to be difficult #TOöx§ As in 3 31. 2×- to not have 2×#Tx§ As in 13 32. ¾õB†Œ - to practise ¾õB†ŒBx§ As in 4 33. x¦- to come Âx§ As in 2 34. vëˆµŽ - to exercise v눵ŽBx§ As in 4 35. ®ÜîÄ - to be famous ®ÜîÄBx§ As in 4 36. - to be Vx§/Wx§ 2Ì#Tx§/ßîÌ#Tx§ 37. - to talk Bx§ As in 4 38. ¨óÀ#T- to wake up ¨óÀ#Tx§ As in 3 39. ¨óÐ- to read ¨óÐ#Tx§ As in 13 40. ¨óÌ- to have ¨óÌ#Tx§ As in 13 41. :NÅ#T!T- to forget :NÅ#T!TOx§ As in 11 42. ;FS- to sleep ;FSx§ As in 3 43. = 2×- to be boring = 2×#Tx§ As in 13 44. = ¨óÌ- to be interesting = ¨óÌ#Tx§ As in 13 45. àí½- to be few àí½#Tx§ As in 13 46. ½õÈ* - to telephone ½õÈ*Bx§ As in 4 47. ª”- to be good ª”x§ As in 5 48. ‘¨- to give ‘¨#Tx§ ‘¨2Ì#Tx§ but see 19 49. E׿- to be cold ’­öx§ As in 3 50. - to do Bx§ As in 4 c G. Shin 2006 77
  • 130.
    =V 10 »Î 6Yesterday I did ... This is a questionnaire exercise. Ask the following questions to five of your fellow students and enter the responses in the grid below. Example Question: #T=V / ÆV ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§? Response: ÃV ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§. @}†Mû 1 @}†Mû 2 @}†Mû 3 @}†Mû 4 @}†Mû 5 ?Ù¾ ?Ù¾ ?Ù¾ ?Ù¾ ?Ù¾ #T=V / ÆV ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§? / Æ V …ø9N½¥ü½ †ÿ#Tx§? / Æ V @}†q…V ¡ë^#Tx§? / Æ V àíÁ9NÁ9N½¥ü½ †ÿ#Tx§? / Æ V ©óÂV ¡ë^#Tx§? / Æ V $Ü€½9N½¥ü½ †ÿ#Tx§? / Æ V ;FS©÷Š ©ë^#Tx§? #T=V / Æ j´P O[Ž­†ÿ#Tx§? w´‡QT#T ¨2 ¨óÌ2Ì#Tx§? / Æ j´P ¨óÌ2Ì#Tx§? v눵ŽvÞˆ q´P †ÿ#Tx§? 2À µŽq´P †ÿ#Tx§? ;FSvÞˆ / Æ j´P ©ë^#Tx§? 78 c G. Shin 2006
  • 131.
    / Æ V ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§? 7V vs VX The particle -V indicates progress towards a goal (and is also used with some time expressions), and the particle -VX indicates the location of an action. Read the following sentences and fill in the blank space with either -V or -VX where appropriate. Discuss your answers with your fellow student. Example 2 ....... n´P¢ëT. =⇒ 2 V n´P¢ëT. @}†Mû 9N½5FV....... n´P¢ëT. =⇒ @}†Mû 9N½5FVVX n´P¢ëT. 1. SX @}†q…....... x§? 2. q…§óÀ....... óê ®‰x§? 3. s¦XdB....... ¡ëZ w´‡QT#T¥ü½ O[Ž­®‰x§? 4. x¦£òŠ ©óÂ....... ¨óÀEN½ ¤Š¡ëT. 5. ~³Î1÷
  • 132.
    BƒŒ....... n´P¢ëT. 6. 61獾.......w´‡QT....... ¡ëT. 7. x§, SX獾 12m®....... w´‡QT....... ¡ëT. 8. w´‡QT C¹‹9N½àíÁ....... 9N½®‰x§? 9. 61¨óÀ ~³Î1÷ 8Rwˆ|«6FV....... …ø 9N½¥ü½ ®‹. 10. $Ü€½....... ¡ëZ O[Ž­®‰x§? 11. ½õ ‘¨¥ëRV p´P....... ¡ëRx§? 12. Kôs¦¢ëRsˆ....... T¸ø!T¥ü½ Üí½©÷Šx§? 13. x¦–µ....... s¼õ‰† Mû¨óÀ
  • 133.
    ....... x§. 14. @}†q….......¾õB†Œ®‹. 15. $Ü€½....... ¨Š w´‡ r´‡ §óÂ. 16. C¹‹ ‘¨¥ëR....... ¨óÀ ©óÂ....... ¨óÀtøˆ C¹‹9N½©÷Š n´P¤÷Šx§? 17. x§, x¦£òŠ x¦–µ....... 7Lsˆ ©óÂ....... w´‡QT C¹‹9N½©÷Š n´P¹Œ. c G. Shin 2006 79
  • 134.
    =V 10 »Î 8Using Particles This exercise is to help you get used to putting together simple sentences in Korean. Make sentences according to the model and also to the translations. Note in particular the use of particles (case markers). Example  ˆ 6FS/#T=V/7Lsˆ¥ü½/n´P- That person met David yesterday.  ˆ 6FSvÞˆ #T=V 7Lsˆ¥ü½ n´P¢ë^#Tx§. 1.  ˆ @}†Mû/P¸ô/¥ëa/¨óÐ- The student reads a lot of books. 2. $ @}†Mû/Î1÷8R½õ/¥ëa/v¦- That student (over there) watches TV a lot. 3. @}†q… o¹U%`/C¹‹9N½àíÁ/‘¨/¥ëa- There are lots of restaurants near university. 4.  ˆ @}†Mû/‘¨¥ëR/B„‡=V// - That student finished the homework over the weekend. 5. @­/#T=V/x¦–µ/–¶7{ý»/- Tae-U bought a mobile phone yesterday afternoon. 6. ¥¾ßîÄ/#T=V/x¦–µ/q„:GV/- Seon-Yeong bought a cat yesterday afternoon. 7. /3NÁ /y¦SX/Üí½#Tv¦- Annie tried a little bit of kimchi. 8. $ @}†Mû/¨óÀtøˆ¥ëR/y¦SX/ - That student (over there) speaks a little Japanese. 9. ¨óÀ/k´P ‘¨¥ëR/w´‡¢íW/¥ëa/¤ˆ- Kylie wrote lots of Hangeul last weekend. 10. #T=V/w´‡QT#T ¨2Â/6FV/¹‰- We listened to the ‘Arirang’ yesterday in the Korean class. 11. @­/#T=V/#Uà /¨óÀ#T- Tae-U got up at six o’clock yesterday. 12. x¦–µ/s¼õ‰†/v눵Ž/ - I exercised with my friend in the afternoon. 13. 7@}†q…/w´‡QT#T/:­- I learn Korean at university 14. 4FW/w´‡QT#T/¾õB†Œ - I practised Korean during the day. 15. 7Lsˆ/8FS/
  • 135.
    /q´P/- David doesn’tdrink coffee at night. 16. w´‡QT/3NÁ /®ÜîÄ - Korea is famous for Gimchi. 17. /#T=V/w´‡QT#T ¨2Â/=†5/x¦- Annie came late to the Korean class yesterday. 18. ¥óÈ/±úGJ ªŠ/co¬Né‡/q„:GV/¨óÌ- On the left of the third last line is a cat. 19. x¦£òŠ/x¦–µ 1/w´‡QT C¹‹9N½àíÁ/s¼õ‰†/àíÁ9NÁ/Üí½- I had lunch with my friend at a Korean restaurant at 7.30 yesterday. 20. #T=V/$Ü€½/7 o´‡/D„ŽQT C¹‹9N½àíÁ/s¼õ‰†/$Ü€½9N½/ - I had dinner with my friend at a Chinese restaurant at 7.30 yesterday. 80 c G. Shin 2006
  • 136.
    / Æ V ¨óÀ#T¢ë^#Tx§? 9Some real life questions Answer the following questions in Korean. 1. SX #TX §ëRx§? 2. 10獾 ½õV #TX §ëR¨ë^#Tx§? 3. ÂQTV ,¤…#Tx§? #Trˆ V ,¤…#Tx§? 4. ÂQT#T¥ü½ O[Ž­B,¤…#Tx§? 5. #T=V x¦–µ 5V óê †ÿ#Tx§? 6. k´P ‘¨¥ëRV óê †ÿ#Tx§? 7. ½õ ‘¨¥ëRV óê Bx§? 8. w´‡QT#T ¨2ÂvÞˆ 1 ‘¨¨óÀV / Æ j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§? 9. Œ­V / Æ j´P w´‡QT#T¥ü½ O[Ž­Bx§? 10. w´‡QT s¼õ‰† q„ ¡ëZ w´‡QT#T¥ü½ ¾õB†ŒBx§? 11. x¦£òŠvÞˆ / Æm® Uª*÷Vx§? 12. 61¨óÀvÞˆ m®x§¨óÀVx§? 13. w´‡QT#TpÙˆ 2À µŽq´P O[Ž­†ÿ#Tx§? 14. #T=V $Ü€½V #TX 9N½†ÿ#Tx§? 15. SX獾vÞˆ / Æ ç¾Vx§? 61獾vÞˆx§? c G. Shin 2006 81
  • 137.
    =V 11 »Î 11¥ëa sˆ;Vx§. 1 WORD SQUARE See how many words relating to food you can find in the word-square below. You can look horizontally, vertically and diagonally to find them. Ž, , AŽ -– $U  p8 R }– H, !! 'R œ™ sD« b ª KR }D‡ xC ‚C FC 'R ‘R #f s– C KDƒ FC }– ‘‚ C 8… Ž, M-e [ C }– #b b « U– e ZC , K† p, _– -I }– I =… n _˜ Ž, o F Ž, ŒC ¶, _S Œ nC U nC sD« o _DG Œ ´ C-e 82 c G. Shin 2006
  • 138.
    ¥ëa sˆ;Vx§. 2 Using-(xˆ)x§ Suggest to people that you meet at the following times and places, using the VST – (xˆ)x§? form. Example at 1.00 at the airport today x¦£òŠ w´‡ V O[@}VX n´P¢ëRx§? Shall we meet at 1 o’clock at the airport today? 1. at 9.00 tomorrow at the university 2. at 11.00 this Saturday at the park 3. at l5.00 today at the movie theatre 4. at 12.00 this Sunday at Seoul station 5. at 3.00 p.m. at the coffee shop 6. at 5.00 at the library 7. at 2.00 this afternoon at the bus terminal 8. at 10.00 at the student canteen 9. at 6.00 this evening at the hospital 10. at 11.00 this morning at the bank 11. at 2.00 this Sunday at the park 12. at 7.00 p.m. this Saturday at In-cheon Airport c G. Shin 2006 83
  • 139.
    =V 11 »Î 3Shall we ...?/Yes, let’s ... Transform the following verb-stems into ‘Shall we ...?’ questions, and then into ‘Yes, let’s ...’ answers. Example - ®‰x§? Shall we do it? 63, ®‹. Yes, let’s do it. 1. ¡ëZ B„‡=V - 2. s¼õ‰†¥ü½ n´P- 3. j´P;FV©÷Š 2 ÝîÄ - 4. –µ9N½©÷Š ‘¨sëˆ - 5. §Šq„¥ü½ Üí½#Tv¦- 6. £ëbq„ x§¥ü½ n´P¤÷Š- 7. T¸ø!T¥ü½ Üí½- 8. ¨2©÷Š ;FO - 9. P¸ô©÷Š ¨óÐ- 10. SX 9N½ - 11. w´‡QT#T¥ü½ O[Ž­ - 12. x¦–µV ½õÈ* - 13. ¥¾Mû4NÁ q„ - 14. Î1÷8R½õ©÷Š v¦- 15. O[@}V - 16. 12V ;FS©÷Š - 17.  ˆq„ 4V ¨óÀ#T- 18. #ú6FO©÷Š ¤ˆ- 19. »Î ‘¨wˆ¥ü½ - 20. SX qøˆ©÷Š 61- 84 c G. Shin 2006
  • 140.
    ¥ëa sˆ;Vx§. 4 UsingNegatives Answer negatively to the following questions. For each question use the picture cue provided. Number one has been done for you as an example. 1. 2. }¦¡ˆ q„ }ˆt« Üí½#Tx§? ¨Wx§? nCo), «—;´ nC«3 sR A Gn
  • 141.
  • 142.
    o). 3. 4. #U »Î¨óÀ¨óÌ#Tx§? :GVq„¥ü½ ª”Bx§? 5. 6. ^o¬;FVVx§? j´P;FVvÞˆ 9öx§? 7. 8. SX Î1÷8R½õ©÷Š Àx§? ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆ 5¥ü½ ª”Bx§? c G. Shin 2006 85
  • 143.
    =V 11 »Î 5What did you eat yesterday? Do this exercise in pairs. One of you asks a question: #T=V óê Üí½2Ì#Tx§?, and the other answers using the picture cue provided. You then exchange at least one follow-up question and the answer. Number one has been done for you as an example. 1. 2. 3. #T=V óê Üí½2Ì#Tx§? M-eC A Gs “n
  • 144.
  • 145.
  • 146.
    o). 4. 5. 6. 7.8. 9. 86 c G. Shin 2006
  • 147.
    ¥ëa sˆ;Vx§. 6 Findsomeone who likes ... This is a class activity. Your objective is to find someone in the class who likes one or more of the following. Write the names of up to three students who answer ‘Yes’. in the spaces provided. TARGET QUESTION: w´‡QT C¹‹9N½: w´‡QT C¹‹9N½©÷Š ª”Bx§? POSITIVE ANSWER: 63, w´‡QT C¹‹9N½©÷Š ª”Bx§. NEGATIVE ANSWER: ¢íWFmx§. In case you haven’t met ‘¢íWFmx§.’ before, it is the equivalent of English ‘We-ell...’, and it carries the idea of negativity effectively – and more politely – than a brusque ‘x§’. §Šq„: (1) (2) (3) 8NÁ¦ëT: (1) (2) (3) 3NÁ : (1) (2) (3) wˆ
  • 148.
    5 (Spaghetti): (1)(2) (3) |ˆ
  • 149.
    (Meat-pie): (1) (2)(3) 6FO (Laksa): (1) (2) (3) q¼õ9FS : (1) (2) (3)
  • 150.
    : (1) (2)(3) Kô‘¨: (1) (2) (3) }¦s¦‘¨: (1) (2) (3) öwˆ : (1) (2) (3) ¢W}ˆ: (1) (2) (3) @Rwˆ: (1) (2) (3) GJyˆ: (1) (2) (3) ®*ù®‹: (1) (2) (3) w´‡QT ßîÄÈ*: (1) (2) (3) w´‡QT rœ8: (1) (2) (3) 5: (1) (2) (3) q„:GV: (1) (2) (3) Language Notes: ßîÄÈ* = movie; rœ8 = songs c G. Shin 2006 87
  • 151.
    =V 11 »Î 7MAKING DIALOGUE Make a dialogue to fit the following situation. • You have been invited to a Korean home. Your host greets you at the door, and invites you in. • You say hello to your host. • Your host asks you to sit down, and offers you a cola. • You accept the cola. • You and your host talk for while, and then your host suggests that you both eat. • You all sit at the table. Your host invites you to begin. • You eat a plateful and remark on how delicious it is. • Your host asks if you like Gimchi. • You reply yes, it’s delicious. • Your host then invites you to have more Galbi. • By now, you feel you’ve had enough and decline. • The meal finishes, and you say you’ve eaten well and add what a good meal it has been. 88 c G. Shin 2006
  • 152.
    ¥ëa sˆ;Vx§. 8 RolePlay Study the following conversation piece, and do role plays with fellow students on the basis of the piece or on your own. Below, Seon-Yeong is arranging with Annie to go to a Korean restaurant. ¥¾ßîÄ: ½õ |«x§¨óÀV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§? Annie: 63? ¥¾ßîÄ: ½õ |«x§¨óÀV j´P ¨óÌ#Tx§? Annie: , 63, j´P¨óÌ#Tx§. ¥¾ßîÄ: w´‡QT C¹‹9N½ #TDJx§? ª”Bx§? Annie: 63, ª”Bx§. ¥¾ßîÄ: ¡ëR Üí½#T ,¤…#Tx§? Annie: x§. ¡ëR #TDJx§? nU ¨óÌ#Tx§? ¥¾ßîÄ: 63, nU ¨óÌ#Tx§. @}†q… o¹U%`V ¡ëR©ó ¥ëax§. ¡ëZ ¡ëRx§? Annie: 63, ¡ëZ x§. / Æ V ¡ëRx§? C¹‹ ... 6 Æs¬ª˜x§? ¥¾ßîÄ: 63, Æs¬ª˜x§. Annie:  ˆÛíÁ, 5 o´‡V @}†q…
  • 153.
    BƒŒVX n´Px§. Language Notes:, 63 = Oh, I see ...; C¹‹ ... = uhm ...;  ˆÛíÁ, ... = well, then ... TRANSLATION S: Are you free this Saturday? A: Pardon? S: Are you free this Saturday? A: Ah – I understand now. Yes, I’m free. S: What do you think of Korean food? Do you like it? A: Yes, I do. S: Have you tried pork Galbi (spare ribs)? A: No. What’s it like? Is it nice? S: Yes it is. There are quite a few Galbi places around near the school. Shall we go? A: Sure. What time shall we go? Let’s see, is 6 o’clock OK? S: Yeah, fine. A: Well, then, let’s meet at the coffee shop at 5.30. c G. Shin 2006 89
  • 154.
    =V 12 »Î 12 t« x§, !Twˆt« x§? 1 From ... to ... Look at the pictures below and make sentences according to the Example. Example ©óÂVX 61 !Twˆt« ¡ë^#Tx§. (1) (2) (3) (4) 90 c G. Shin 2007
  • 155.
    t« x§, !Twˆt«x§? (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) c G. Shin 2007 91
  • 156.
    =V 12 »Î 2HOW MUCH? HOW FAR? The following table contains basic express bus travel information, giving fares, distance and journey times between Seoul and a number of major Korean cities. Read the table and make sentences according to the Examples. The fares are in won, and the distances are in kilometers. j´P X©Š — Ž­p´P 70,000 441 5.30 X©Š — ØIÄ‘¨ 60,000 363 4.30 X©Š — 7‰† 55,000 297 4.00 X©Š — 7½õ 28,000 153 2.00 X©Š — ½õ‘¨ 37,000 233 3.30 X©Š — ':H‘¨ 50,000 320 4.00 X©Š — 3FV?ÙÁ 42,000 232 4.00 Examples How much ..?: X©ŠVX ... 2ÀWx§? How far ..?: X©ŠVX ... 2À ×éx§? How long ..?: X©ŠVX ... / Æ j´PN†‹ +ñÀOx§? 92 c G. Shin 2007
  • 157.
    t« x§, !Twˆt«x§? 3 Jumbled Conversation This is a reading comprehension exercise. Following is a scrambled conversation between Ji-Su and David. Unscramble it and write it in the space provided. Ji-Su has just met David after not seeing him for a few days. David: 9½õ !Twˆ¥ü½ x§. David: 63, x¦8j´Pn´PVx§. David: 61V x§. ¨: x§D†‹ #T+N;Vx§? ¨: #T x§? David: 63, ©ëR 61x§. ¨: / Æ ½õ !Twˆ¥ü½ x§? ¨:  ˆ8x§?  ˆÛíÁ, ¡ëZ ¡ëT. ¨: x¦8j´Pn´PVx§. David: 63,  ˆ.Â. 4 Using the particle s¦ This exercise is to help you practice using the particle s¦. Answer B’s question in each example positively using the particle -s¦. Number one has been done for you. 1. A: 4÷¨pÙˆ uæˆÈ¥ü½ ª”Bx§. B: ßîď¨pÙˆx§? s—, a.U·@8e ~±n´o). 2. A: @­pÙˆ w´‡QT¥ëR©÷Š O[Ž­Bx§. B: ¨óÀtøˆ¥ëRvÞˆx§? 3. A: w´‡QTV ¡ë^.oP#Tx§. B: ¨óÀtøˆVpÙˆx§? 4. A: ©óÂVX $Ü€½9N½¥ü½ Bx§. B: …ø9N½pÙˆx§? 5. A: ½õ ‘¨¥ëRV p´PV x§. B: ¨pÙˆx§? 6. A: jBõKô‘¨¥ü½ §ë^#Tx§. B: ÝîÄKô‘¨pÙˆx§? 7. A: §Šq„¥ü½ ‘¨s눆ÿ#Tx§. B: HJľõvÞˆx§? 8. A: q„:GV¥ü½ ª”Bx§. B: ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆx§? 9. A: w´‡QTp¼¾s눩÷Š ¨óÐ#Tx§. B: D„ŽQTp¼¾sëˆvÞˆx§? 10. A: ©ëT¥ü½ ‘¨s눆ÿ#Tx§. B: n´P‹¨pÙˆx§? c G. Shin 2007 93
  • 158.
    =V 12 »Î 5Which bus goes where? The table below lists the starting point and the terminus for a number of bus routes. Refer to it to answer the questions that follow. QUESTION: 83½õ !TwˆpÙˆ #T x§? ANSWER: 83½õ !TwˆpÙˆ @Eá x§. #TX #T? 83½õ X©Šßî½ @Eá 53½õ ÜîÄµŽ µŽ7sëˆ 142½õ X©Š7@}†q… 3NÁ}¦O[@} 342½õ D‚Žt« 1 4FSp´P 586½õ áZû¨ë[ ¾õ;V7@}†q… 7½õ @Eá Eá 39½õ p¼¾;V5¨ë[ q„B‚‡!Twˆ'N¢ëR 23½õ q„7¨ë[ µŽ7sëˆ;FV 1. 586½õ !TwˆpÙˆ #TX «½¦ëRBx§? 2. EáV pÙˆ !TwˆpÙˆ / ƽõVx§? 3. 39½õ !TwˆpÙˆ #T x§? 4. 23½õ !TwˆpÙˆ #TX #T x§? 5. EáV pÙˆ !TwˆpÙˆ #TX «½¦ëRBx§? 6. @EáV pÙˆ !TwˆpÙˆ / ƽõVx§? 7. 586½õ !TwˆpÙˆ ¾õ;V7@}†q…V x§? 8. 142½õ !TwˆpÙˆ #T x§? 94 c G. Shin 2007
  • 159.
    t« x§, !Twˆt«x§? 6 THE STREET MAP Look at the street map below and fill in the blanks. Number one has been done for you as an example. 1. ~³Î1÷vÞˆ vÞˆT¸û s« V ¨óÌ#Tx§. 2. vÞˆ
  • 160.
    BƒŒ 2 ÉV ¨óÌ#Tx§. 3.ßî½vÞˆ ~³Î1÷ V ¨óÌ#Tx§. 4. vÞˆ vÞˆT¸û x¦rã»Né‡ 2 ÉV ¨óÌ#Tx§. 5. vÞˆ ­ZQT ñíV ¨óÌ#Tx§. 6. O[EávÞˆ ~³Î1÷ V ¨óÌ#Tx§. 7. ßî½vÞˆ O[Eá V ¨óÌ#Tx§. 8. È*;FV§óÀvÞˆO[Eá V ¨óÌ#Tx§. 9. LôÈ*àíÁvÞˆ ~³Î1÷ V ¨óÌ#Tx§. 10.
  • 161.
    BƒŒvÞˆ C¹‹9N½àíÁ V ¨óÌ#Tx§. 11.pÙˆ ÝîÄEá 7FWvÞˆ¾õV ¨óÌ#Tx§. 12. XàíÁvÞˆ C¹‹9N½àíÁ V ¨óÌ#Tx§. 13. #UT¸ûpÙˆ ©(N V ¨óÌ#Tx§. 14. CFV©óÂvÞˆ O[Eá V ¨óÌ#Tx§. 15. vÞˆ ­ZQT co¬Né‡ 2 ÉV ¨óÌ#Tx§. c G. Shin 2007 95
  • 162.
    =V 12 »Î 7Conversation Activities This is a conversation exercise about commuting and travelling in general. Form a small group and practise asking and answering the following questions. Travelling to class ©óÂVX @}†q… 2À ×éx§? @}†q…VpÙˆ #T:Ê5 Âx§? @}†q…VpÙˆ / Æ ½õ !Twˆ/½õ t« Âx§? 2ÀWx§? ©óÂVX @}†q… / Æ j´PN†‹ +ñÀOx§? x¦£òŠvÞˆ / Æ V ©óÂVX «½¦ëR†ÿ#Tx§? @}†q…VpÙˆ / Æ V s¦}††ÿ#Tx§? ©óÂVpÙˆ / Æ V ¤Šx§? (¤Š- = to return) Your Recent Trips Have you taken any trips lately – local? interstate? overseas? See if you can recount the details of the trip by using the following sentences. 1. k´P ..........V ..........V ¡ë^.oP#Tx§. 2. ..........(xˆ)t« ¡ë^.oP#Tx§. 3. .......... q„ ¡ë^.oP#Tx§. 4. ..........V ©ó©÷Š +N¢ë^#Tx§. 5. .......... ..........j´P +ñÀÞîÌ#Tx§. 6. ..........VX ..........†ÿ#Tx§. 7. ..........VpÙˆ ..........j´P/¨óÀ/‘¨¨óÀ ¨óÌ2Ì#Tx§. 8. ..........VpÙˆ ..........¨óÀŽ­'N ..........¨óÀ ¨óÌ2Ì#Tx§. 9. ..........V ..........©÷Š/¥ü½ +N¢ë^#Tx§. 10. ..........V ©óÂV ¤Š.oP#Tx§. 1. Last ...... I went to ...... (use ‘¨¥ëR, days of the week, or months of the year) 2. I went there by ...... 3. I went there with ...... 4. I left home at ...... o’clock. 5. It took ...... hours to get to ...... 6. (What did you do when you got there – did you have a meal, for example?) 7. We were there for ...... hours/days/weeks. 8. We were there from ...... to ...... (Give dates.) 9. We left there at ...... o’clock. 10. We arrived home at ...... 96 c G. Shin 2007
  • 163.
    t« x§, !Twˆt«x§? 8 Making Dialogue In small groups, make a dialogue to fit the following situation. 1. You want to go to the beach tomorrow, and you want your friends to go with you. You ask them what they’re doing, and would they like to go to the seaside. 2. They say yes, suggest you all go together, and ask if you’ve got a car. 3. You say you have, and ask whereabouts should you all meet. 4. They suggest the station, and ask where you’re planning to go. 5. You say Seaview (Ž®) Beach is good. 6. They ask how far is it? 7. You tell them it’s twenty kilometres, and that it should take half an hour to get there. 8. They ask you what time you should leave. 9. You suggest nine o’clock, and that you’ll arrive at the beach at nine thirty. 10. Perhaps because all these details make you sound like a tour guide, they ask, as a joke, how much the fare will be. 11. You answer twenty dollars a person! c G. Shin 2007 97
  • 164.
    =V 13 »Î 13D‚‡ 1 Reading Practice Read the following conversation and answer the questions that follow. In the conversation Annie and her friend ¥¾ßîÄ are talking about their families. ¥¾ßîÄ: 9N½‰† u¦‹¨ / Æ 6FSVx§? Annie: u¦‹¨ 63 6FSVx§. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆx§? ¥¾ßîÄ: u¦‹¨ à 6FSVx§. Annie: #TN q„ !T q„ €¦ Šž ¨óÌ#Tx§? ¥¾ßîÄ: 63, x¦ , ½õ ¨óÌ#Tx§. Annie: x¦pÙˆ SX ÿm® Bx§? ¥¾ßîÄ: x¦pÙˆ SX vÞˆT¸ûV 0x§. Annie:  ˆ8x§? ½õpÙˆx§? ¥¾ßîÄ: ½õpÙˆ 7@}†MûVx§.  ˆ½õ7L, pÙˆ Ž­u¦4NÁ 5;Vx§? Annie: 63, 5;Vx§. ¥¾ßîÄ: ½õ, x¦pÙˆx§? Annie: 2×#Tx§. 4FSµŽMû ¨óÌ#Tx§. SX q„¹Ž@}†q…V 0x§. QUESTIONS 1. pÙˆ 9N½‰† / Æ 6FSVx§? 2. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆ 9N½‰† / Æ 6FSVx§? 3. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆ åAû=V9 / Æ ¨óÌ#Tx§? 4. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆ x¦ ¨óÌ#Tx§? ½õpÙˆx§? 5. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆ µŽMû ¨óÌ#Tx§? 6. pÙˆ Ž­u¦4NÁ 5;Vx§? 7. ¥¾ßîÄpÙˆx§? 8. pÙˆ x¦ ¨óÌ#Tx§? ½õpÙˆx§? 9. pÙˆ µŽMû ¨óÌ#Tx§? 10. ¥¾ßîÄÂÔ x¦pÙˆ SX ÿm® Bx§? ½õpÙˆx§? 11. ÂÔ µŽMûvÞˆ SX ÿm® Bx§? 98 c G. Shin 2007
  • 165.
    D‚‡ 2 The FamilyTree Look at this family tree and describe the relationship between the pairs of people that follow. Example ßîÄÈ — Þ¶ÄÈ =⇒ s—·@U _ —·@q@ sSCno). 1. ÜîÄ= — Þ¶ÄÈ 2. 8FOC¶Ž — ¨È 3. r¼õ¨ — ßîÄÈ 4. Þ¶ÄÈ — ¨È 5. r¼õ¨ — 8FOC¶Ž 6. ¨È — Þ¶ÄÈ 7. Ä%ÜîÄCµ‡ — ¨È 8. Ä%ÜîÄCµ‡ — 8FOC¶Ž 9. ÜîÄ= — Ä%ÜîÄCµ‡ 10. Ä%ÜîÄCµ‡ — r¼õ¨ 11. ¨È — 8FOC¶Ž 12. ßîÄÈ — ßîď¨ 13. Þ¶ÄÈ — 8FOC¶Ž 14. r¼õ¨ — ¨È 15. ßîÄÈ — r¼õ¨ 16. ßîď¨ — r¼õ¨ 17. ßîď¨ — Þ¶ÄÈ 18. r¼õ¨ — ßîď¨ c G. Shin 2007 99
  • 166.
    =V 13 »Î 3How long since ...? Transform the following sentences according to the Example. In this Example we are assuming that the conversation took place in 2003. Example 3NÁ¥¾MûÂÔ °ëRvÞˆ 1988獾V @#T¢ë^#Tx§. Mr Kim’s daughter was born in 1988. =⇒ Dƒ_S_˜q@ -bnC  n