Jump to content

Korean/Determiners

From Wikibooks, open books for an open world

Korean Determiners

Determiners are particles attached to nouns in order to determine their function in a sentence, often denoting subjects and objects (direct and indirect). Determiners in Korean are slightly dependent on the final sound of the noun.

~는/~은 are the particles used to determine the subject of a sentence, or the one doing the action. "~는" is used whenever the final sound of a noun is a consonant, while its converse, "~은" is used whenever the final sound of a noun is a vowel.

E.g.(저는 집에 갑니다.) Literally: I (subj.) house to-go.


~를/~을 are the particles used to determine the direct object of a sentence. "~를" is used when the final sound of a noun is a vowel, while "~을" is used when the final sound of a noun is a consonant. E.g( 저는 나의 숙제를 하겠어요.)

Literally: I (subj.) my homework will-do.


~에게/~한테 are often used to determine the indirect object of a sentence. Despite both being grammatically correct, ~한테 is used far more often, as ~에게 is sometimes deemed "too formal" in many situations.

E.g (저한테 그 책을 주세요.) Literally: I (in.obj.) that-book give.