| in English | in Korean | S |
|---|---|---|
| If I hadn’t met you | λ΄κ°λΉμ μλ§λμ§ μμλ€λ©΄ |
Comments, Questions, Etc. About If I hadn’t met you in Korean
Comment on the Korean word “λ΄κ°λΉμ μλ§λμ§ μμλ€λ©΄” in the following ways:
- Tips and tricks to remember how to say If I hadn’t met you in Korean
- Explanations on the translation λ΄κ°λΉμ μλ§λμ§ μμλ€λ©΄
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Sentence info.
Structure Breakdown:
β’ "λ΄κ°" comes from "λ" (I) with the subject marker "-κ°," indicating that "I" is the subject.
β’ "λΉμ μ" adds "λΉμ " (you) with the object marker "-μ," showing that "you" is the object.
β’ "λ§λμ§ μμλ€λ©΄" is the conditional form of "λ§λλ€" (to meet). It is formed by taking the verb stem "λ§λ-", adding the negative ending "-μ§ μλ€" (did not), and then appending the conditional suffix "-λ©΄" (if). Thus, it literally means "if did not meet."
Tips to Remember:
β’ Notice that the negative form "-μ§ μλ€" can be used for past actions when combined with time context, and adding "-λ©΄" turns it into a conditional.
β’ Remember that markers like "-κ°" (subject) and "-μ" (object) are key for determining the role of each noun in the sentence.
β’ Practice by forming similar conditional statements using other verbs with the structure: Subject + Object + Verb stem + μ§ μμλ€λ©΄.
Romanized Version:
"Naega dangsineul mannaji anattamyeon."
Alternate Ways to Express "If I Hadn't Met You":
1. "λ΄κ° λΉμ μ λ§λμ§ λͺ»νλ€λ©΄" (Naega dangsineul mannaji mothaetdamyeon) β using "λͺ»νλ€" to imply inability or improbability.
2. "λ€κ° μμλλΌλ©΄" (Nega eopseotdeoramyeon) β a more idiomatic and less literal way, meaning "if you hadn't been there," though contextually similar.
These variations provide slightly different nuances but all convey the conditional meaning "if I hadn't met you."
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