| in English | in Korean | S |
|---|---|---|
| to chase, run after | μ«μλ€ |
Comments, Questions, Etc. About To chase, run after in Korean
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μ«μλ€ info.
Word: μ«λ€ (jjoch-da) β Meaning: "to chase" or "run after."
Conjugated Form Provided: μ«μλ€ (jjoch-ass-da), which is the past tense form.
Tips to Remember the Word:
β’ Notice the sound "μ«" (jjoch) resembles the abrupt action of chasing.
β’ Connect it with the English βjotβ for quick movement, even though the meanings differ, both evoke a sense of urgency.
β’ Associate the rounded ending βμλ€β with having completed an action.
Explanations:
β’ μ«μλ€ comes from the base verb μ«λ€, indicating that someone or something has chased or ran after someone/something in the past.
β’ It is a regular conjugation for this verb in the past tense.
Other Words with Similar Meanings:
β’ μΆκ²©νλ€ (chugyeokhaet-da) β βpursuedβ in a more formal/narrative tone.
β’ λ°λΌκ°λ€ (ttalagatda) β βfollowedβ sometimes used when referring to chasing in a less aggressive sense.
Different Conjugations of μ«λ€:
Infinitive (dictionary form):
β’ μ«λ€ (jjoch-da) β to chase
Present Tense:
β’ Informal low: μ«μ (jjoch-a)
β’ Informal high/polite: μ«μ (jjoch-a)
β’ Formal: μ«λλ€ (jjoch-neun-da)
Past Tense:
β’ Informal low: μ«μμ΄ (jjoch-ass-eo)
β’ Informal high/polite: μ«μμ΄μ (jjoch-ass-eo-yo)
β’ Formal: μ«μλ€ (jjoch-ass-da)
Future Tense:
β’ Informal low: μ«μ κ±°μΌ (jjoch-eul geo-ya)
β’ Informal high/polite: μ«μ κ±°μμ (jjoch-eul geo-ye-yo)
β’ Formal: μ«μ κ²μ΄λ€ (jjoch-eul geo-sit-da)
Examples in Sentences:
1. κ·Έλ λλ§κ°λ λ²μΈμ μ«μλ€.
β(Romanized: Geu-neun do-mang-ga-neun beom-in-eul jjoch-ass-da.)
βMeaning: He chased the fleeing criminal.
2. κ°κ° 곡μ μ«λλ€.
β(Romanized: Gae-ga gong-eul jjoch-neun-da.)
βMeaning: The dog chases the ball.
3. λ΄μΌ, μ°λ¦¬λ κ·Έ μ¬λμ μ«μ κ±°μμ.
β(Romanized: Nae-il, u-ri-neun geu sa-ram-eul jjoch-eul geo-ye-yo.)
βMeaning: Tomorrow, we will chase that person.
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