Korean language masters, please come to the grammar problem

Updated on technology 2024-02-09
7 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    1.You're right, is a fixed ending that means in the future tense, "would...""。

    2.It means to wear, and the verb is used for wearing shoes in general, and when used in conjunction with it, it is written because the ending is added at the end

    3.The function of that in the third sentence is to connect two verbs, which are and .

    The meaning of three sentences.

    1. I will go once.

    2. I'll put it on and try it.

    3. Let's take a look.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Wow, your sentences are very colloquial, and many people don't use them well.

    All three of these sentences have " in the first person in the future tense: how will I do it.

    However, "" has a special meaning, which alone means to see, and when used together with other verbs, it emphasizes the action expressed by the previous verb, rather than the meaning of seeing with the naked eye. There is a meaning of giving it a try, trying it out.

    I'll take a look. I'll go for it. The emphasis here is not on "once" and "looking", but on "going."

    I'll wear it, I'll try it. I wear it through and see. The emphasis is on "wearing".

    The prototype of "Wear, only for socks and shoes, things worn on the feet can be used. The subject is a person or an animal.

    I'll go around again, I'll look at something else, I'll look at something else and come back. The emphasis here is on "looking".

    It's a typical phrase for walking out of the store without buying anything, although it says, "I basically won't come back again."

    Take another look and come over, emphasizing "one look", there is a subtle difference. When there are more than two verbs, it is used after the first few verbs to indicate the succession relationship. There is also an emphasis on the role.

    After reading (over) (again) come over.

    In addition, expressions are juxtaposed, and when both subjects have an action, it is used after the verb of the first subject.

    I'm back, and he's still watching. This sentence is written, just look at the meaning.

    Sometimes it's not easy to understand, so you have to read more sentences and memorize more idiomatic expressions, so you will naturally have a sense of language and will use it.

    I hope it can help you, and I hope you can learn and improve

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Let's take a look at the example sentences you wrote:

    Eat it after pickling, not halfway through pickling.

    I went out halfway through the TV, not after watching the TV.

    Those who come back after volunteering don't come back halfway through.

    You come when you play, you don't come when you finish playing.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    (Jun).

    Dependent nouns

    Used after the first or last name.

    When addressing friends or juniors, cousin closeness.

    ] pronouns.

    When the listener is a friend or a male junior, a second-person term with a slight sense of respect is used for equivalence.

    Dependent) dependent noun.

    Used after the first or last name of an adult.

    It is more respectful, and it is also used in more formal occasions or in articles with more readers, and it is not suitable to address superiors or elders during conversations, and is more often used for colleagues or subordinates, juniors.

    ] pronouns.

    Third-person pronouns (honorifics) are mainly used in written language and can be used when the name has already appeared in the previous text.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    : It can be used for most people, both men and women, and it is used for people who are not very different in age.

    It is generally used for people who are younger than themselves or the same, except in special cases, it is generally used for men. The speaker is usually a person of a certain age.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    [ is followed by the verb to mean "to juxtamate".

    It means "to go in".

    For example: [ means "to ask questions, to get to the bottom of things".

    It means "to ask and go in", that is, to "ask endlessly".

    When translating, it can generally be translated as: go in.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    1.영수

    ( => dig, pick, drill) + connect, transfer, parallel) + drill, enter).

    ( => dig, pick, drill) + connect, transfer, juxtapose) + drill, enter) (tense ending).

    ( => dig, pick, drill) + connect, transfer, parallel) + drill, enter) + conjunction)

    == Delve into.

    == Pursue it any further.

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