| in English | in Korean | S |
|---|---|---|
| hold out | λ΄λ°λ€ |
Comments, Questions, Etc. About Hold out in Korean
Comment on the Korean word “λ΄λ°λ€” in the following ways:
- Tips and tricks to remember how to say hold out in Korean
- Explanations on the translation λ΄λ°λ€
- Sentences that use the word “λ΄λ°λ€”
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λ΄λ°λ€ info.
Tips to remember:
β’ Break the word into βλ΄β and βλ°λ€.β Imagine βλ°λ€β means βto push or extendβ and think of holding out (pushing out) your hand. The image of extending your hand to offer something can help you remember that λ΄λ°λ€ means βto hold outβ or βto extend.β
Explanation:
β’ λ΄λ°λ€ is a verb meaning βto extend, to hold out, or to offer.β It is used when physically stretching out an object (like a hand) or sometimes when metaphorically offering something.
β’ Romanized, it is pronounced βnae-mil-da.β
Other words with similar meaning:
β’ λ΄λλ€ (nae-nohta) β often used in the sense of βto put outβ or βto offer.β
β’ μ μνλ€ (je-sihada) β can mean βto presentβ or βto propose,β though it is more formal.
Conjugations (using the standard polite style):
β’ Dictionary form (infinitive): λ΄λ°λ€ (nae-mil-da)
β’ Present tense: λ΄λ°μ΄μ (nae-mil-eo-yo)
β’ Past tense: λ΄λ°μμ΄μ (nae-mil-eo-sseo-yo)
β’ Future tense: λ΄λ° κ±°μμ (nae-mil geo-ye-yo)
β’ Present progressive: λ΄λ°κ³ μμ΄μ (nae-mil-go i-sseo-yo)
β’ Imperative: λ΄λ°μ΄ μ£ΌμΈμ (nae-mil-eo ju-se-yo) β βPlease extend/hold outβ
Example sentences:
β’ He held out his hand.
β Korean: κ·Έλ μμ λ΄λ°μμ΄μ.
β Romanized: Geu-neun son-eul nae-mil-eo-sseo-yo.
β’ She is holding out an offer.
β Korean: κ·Έλ λ μ μμ λ΄λ°κ³ μμ΄μ.
β Romanized: Geu-nyeo-neun je-an-eul nae-mil-go i-sseo-yo.
β’ Hold out your hand, please.
β Korean: μμ λ΄λ°μ΄ μ£ΌμΈμ.
β Romanized: Son-eul nae-mil-eo ju-se-yo.
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