My story:
As I said before, I'm a learner too. I am nowhere close to being fluent in korean- in other words, consider me on an early-intermediate level.
I started learning in 2019. I saw an alphabet chart that I have put here in this chapter for you all.
After I had practiced the alphabets, I moved onto words.
I looked for apps and found some that bored me. Duolingo too. It wasn't helping.
So I kept looking for apps, youtube ain't much helpful- for my beginner self it wasn't.
I found an awesome app. Though I lacked vocabulary, I still did learnt a lot of grammar. I'm not a grammar person sorry ;) its kinda hard for me to learn it but the app helped.
Then I started looking for native speakers to talk to. Then I heard about how people went on that app called "Hello Talk" so there I was. I met awesome people there (a reminder: the koreans there aren't as awesome as you'd be expecting. They ghost a lot.)
For developing the native accent and the right pronunciation, you'd have to watch korean dramas or reality shows. Personally, I think music is not helpful to learn the accent or the sentence structure- it is useful for vocabary building.
Now I do have a "talk to me in korean" beginner pdf book. I never visited their website but I heard its really helpful.
And here I am. Passing my knowledge to y'all.
Resources:
The hangul chart I used:
Proven to be the most helpful app:
Keyboards:
1) AlKeyboard
2) Naver smartboard (comes with a translator and spelling/spacing corrector)That's pretty much it, 안녕♡
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Korean Language 101
RandomLet's learn korean together♡ In this era, communication plays a huge role in our lives. Therefore, learning languages provides to be really helpful- especially when you interact with people from various ethnicities. This book contains the following...