Talk to Me in Korean 1 Flashcards
주세요
Please give me; I would like to have
Can be used when asking someone to hand something to you, when ordering from a restaurant, or when attached to a verb to ask someone to do something for you
맛
Taste
맛있어요
It is tasty; it is delicious
Literally means it has taste
Taste + to exist/have
맛 + 있어요
Can put a noun in front to say BLANK is delicious
맛없어요
It tastes bad
Taste + to not have
맛 + 없어요
잘 먹겠습니다
Literally means “I am going to eat well”
Used when you are about to start eating as a thanks for the meal, regardless of who is paying
“Thank you for the food/ I will enjoy it”
Can also be used to tell a particular person who is paying for the meal “thank you “
잘 먹었습니다
“I have eaten well”
Used to say “thank you for the food” to whoever bought you the meal, or to just say “thanks for the meal” in general: or “I enjoyed the meal”
-고 싶어요
“Want to”
Add this ending to an infinitive (take off 다 first), and it means want to + verb
가다
To go
보다
To see/watch/look
If you put the “want to” ending with this verb, as a phrase said on its own it means “I miss you” –> 보고 싶어요
먹다
To eat
더
more
우늘
Today
어제
Yesterday
내일
Tomorrow
지금
Now