< Korean
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Learn Korean (Introduction)Reading and writing
Conversation1단계: Beginner2단계: High beginner3단계: Low intermediate • 4단계: High intermediate • 5단계: Low advanced6단계: Advanced

Grammar: Sentence word orderVerbsNounsParticlesPersonal pronounsDemonstrative pronounsAdjectives • Determiners • ConjunctionsComparatives & superlativesForming questionsForming commandsForming dates & times

Adjectives come in two forms in Korean. In their main form, they are inflected like verbs (i.e. with honorifics, tense, and speech levels) and come at the end of their sentence or clause.

Korean: (This lesson is incomplete. Click "edit" to provide an example.)

English: Click here for the Wiktionary entry for ?.
When you find the answer, you can add it here by clicking "edit".

Adjectives also have an "attributive" form that ends in ㄴ (often 은). Grammatically, adjectives in this form are 관형사 ("determiners"), which always come before the noun they modify.

Korean: (This lesson is incomplete. Click "edit" to provide an example.)

English: Click here for the Wiktionary entry for ?.
When you find the answer, you can add it here by clicking "edit".

Some abstract Korean nouns translate as adjectives:

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Learn Korean (Introduction)Reading and writing
Conversation1단계: Beginner2단계: High beginner3단계: Low intermediate • 4단계: High intermediate • 5단계: Low advanced6단계: Advanced

Grammar: Sentence word orderVerbsNounsParticlesPersonal pronounsDemonstrative pronounsAdjectives • Determiners • ConjunctionsComparatives & superlativesForming questionsForming commandsForming dates & times

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