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I’m not good at Korean in Korean šŸ‡°šŸ‡·


in English in Korean S
I’m not good at Korean ģ €ėŠ” ķ•œźµ­ģ–“ė„¼ ģž˜ ėŖ»ķ•“ģš”
How to say “I’m not good at Korean” in Korean? “ģ €ėŠ” ķ•œźµ­ģ–“ė„¼ ģž˜ ėŖ»ķ•“ģš””. Here you will learn how to pronounce “ģ €ėŠ” ķ•œźµ­ģ–“ė„¼ ģž˜ ėŖ»ķ•“ģš”” correctly and in the comments below you will be able to get all sorts of advice on I’m not good at Korean in Korean like tips & tricks to remember it, questions, explanations and more.

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Sentence info.

Breakdown of the sentence "ģ €ėŠ” ķ•œźµ­ģ–“ė„¼ ģž˜ ėŖ»ķ•“ģš”.":
• "ģ €ėŠ”" (romanized: jeoneun)
ā€ƒā€“ "ģ €" means "I" in a humble form, and "ėŠ”" is the topic marker, setting "I" as the topic of the sentence.

• "ķ•œźµ­ģ–“ė„¼" (romanized: hangug-eoreul)
ā€ƒā€“ "ķ•œźµ­ģ–“" means "Korean language", and "넼" is the object marker, indicating that Korean is what the speaker is referring to.

• "ģž˜ ėŖ»ķ•“ģš”" (romanized: jal mosheo-yo)
ā€ƒā€“ "ģž˜" is an adverb meaning "well".
ā€ƒā€“ "ėŖ»ķ•“ģš”" is the polite form of "ėŖ»ķ•˜ė‹¤", meaning "cannot do" or "am not able to do".
ā€ƒā€“ Together, "ģž˜ ėŖ»ķ•“ģš”" conveys "am not good at" or "cannot do well".

Tips to remember the formation:
• Remember that Korean sentences often place the topic first using markers like "ėŠ”" or "ģ“/ź°€".
• Object particles ("넼" or "ģ„") come right after the object word.
• Adverbs (like "ģž˜") usually come immediately before the verb they modify.
• In negative expressions, "ėŖ»" is added before the verb stem to create the sense of inability.

Alternate ways to say "I'm not good at Korean":
• "ģ €ėŠ” ķ•œźµ­ģ–“ė„¼ ģž˜ ėŖ»ķ•©ė‹ˆė‹¤." (romanized: jeoneun hangug-eoreul jal mothamnida) – using a more formal ending.
• "제 ķ•œźµ­ģ–“ ģ‹¤ė „ģ“ ė³„ė”œģ˜ˆģš”." (romanized: je hangug-eo silryeok-i byeollo-yeyo) – which literally means "My Korean language skills are not very good."
• "ķ•œźµ­ė§ģ„ ģž˜ ėŖ»ķ•“ģš”." (romanized: hanguk-mareul jal mosheo-yo) – using "ķ•œźµ­ė§" instead of "ķ•œźµ­ģ–“"; both are acceptable.

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