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blunder1983
Joined: 12 Apr 2005
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Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2005 5:46 am Post subject: Good Korean study books |
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Hi guys
I'm TRYING to learn Korean, first I bought the Language Plus Korean for Foreigners which sucked majorly, i mean, 6 minutes on the Alphabet
Now I'm using Survival Korean (its the one with a guy with a MASSIVE cheesy grin on his face on the front cover) from it I've successfully deciphered the alphabet (well except for a few blips) but I find the first chapter utterly overwhelming.
Anyone had a book which worked well for them? I'm a COMPLETE novice when it comes to speaking Korean.
Thanks!
Chris |
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kprrok
Joined: 06 Apr 2004 Location: KC
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Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2005 5:54 am Post subject: |
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If you're overwhelmed by the first chapter of Survival Korean by Revere or whatever his name is, you're not gonna survive any book I've seen on the Korean language. His is by far the easiest I've seen for a novice.
I'm over half-way through it and I find it to be a very good guide. I also have my girlfriend help me out when he's being a bit formal to correct it to make it more natural.
KPRROK |
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blunder1983
Joined: 12 Apr 2005
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Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2005 6:06 am Post subject: |
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Guess I havent given it much of a chance. I only listened to the tape once.
Just wanting to see what people regard as "the best" book for learning so I don't devote time to a book which aint as good as others. |
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endofthewor1d

Joined: 01 Apr 2003 Location: the end of the wor1d.
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Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2005 6:34 am Post subject: |
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one step at a time, dude. first, learn the alphabet. learn it inside and out. and then learn it some more. you can pretty much get a good familiarity with it in about an hour. then go walk around your neighborhood and just start reading sh-t. even if you don't understand the meaning of it, you'll feel better by being able to read it. but what will really boost your confidence is when you start to notice that a lot of stuff you see (i'd give it a percentage in the double digits) is actually english (or at least attempting to be) written phonetically in korean.
once you can read, get a book that uses the hangul rather than one that romanises it. if you learn via romanisation, you're just going to have to re-learn everything you're inevitably horribly mispronouncing.
the book i did the best on my own with was 'easy korean for foreigners'. crappy title, but the illustrations were entertaining, and the dialogues weren't unspeakably boring. it's got a bright orange color.
another one, with a blue cover, did me some good with the help of a tutor. i forgot the name of it, and i loaned it to someone else. sorry.
the one i'm using now is the seoul national university textbook. the college i teach at uses it as their koren language book. i get to take the class for free, so i jumped at the opportunity. i've completed the first book, and will begin the second one in the fall. i don't have a lot of self-discipline, so i would never be able to get through these books on my own. but in a classroom, they're pretty good. something in particular that i like about them is that while most learning korean books insist on teaching only the super-polite form of the language and nothing else, these books cater to those who intend to talk to people other than emperors during their time here. at chapter 8, they begin dropping the 'supnida's'
anyway... good luck, and don't give up. every bit of korean you learn here will increase the quality of the time you spend here. |
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shakuhachi

Joined: 08 Feb 2003 Location: Sydney
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Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2005 6:54 am Post subject: |
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Active Korean.
A good book. Check out the reviews in the above link. |
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Zenpickle
Joined: 06 Jan 2004 Location: Anyang -- Bisan
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Posted: Mon Jul 18, 2005 10:13 pm Post subject: |
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I've tried three series of Korean books so far. I forget the name of the first one. I, too, have "Korean for Foreigners." The bad thing about that book is that it teaches you all honorific forms until page 176. So you really don't learn any practical everyday Korean until then.
I'm currently using "Korean Through English." I have a friend who liked the first book but said that the learning curve jumps suddenly in book two. This has been my favorite book. It goes at a steady pace. It teaches one concept per chapter. It explains *why* certain things are done grammatically. It gives good advice on pronunciation. It reinforces previous chapters, rather than give you a vocabulary word once and assume you memorized it the first time. |
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Son Deureo!
Joined: 30 Apr 2003
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Posted: Tue Jul 19, 2005 12:04 am Post subject: |
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This is the best book I've ever seen, with very logical explanations of grammar. However, there are no pretty pictures, and it makes very few attempts to entertain you. But it's thorough and logical. If you're serious about learning the language, this book is the best place to start. There's also a sequel called Continuing Korean, and I understand a third book is due for release soon.
Read more about it here |
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Cymro
Joined: 11 Jun 2004
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Posted: Tue Jul 19, 2005 3:08 am Post subject: |
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| endofthewor1d wrote: |
one step at a time, dude. first, learn the alphabet. learn it inside and out. and then learn it some more. you can pretty much get a good familiarity with it in about an hour. then go walk around your neighborhood and just start reading sh-t. even if you don't understand the meaning of it, you'll feel better by being able to read it. but what will really boost your confidence is when you start to notice that a lot of stuff you see (i'd give it a percentage in the double digits) is actually english (or at least attempting to be) written phonetically in korean.
once you can read, get a book that uses the hangul rather than one that romanises it. if you learn via romanisation, you're just going to have to re-learn everything you're inevitably horribly mispronouncing. |
Just what I was going to say!
When I did begin studying from books, I started with ������/Sisa's "Korean for Foreigners". It was just the book they used at the local free classes, but it didn't take long to realise that the Korean in the book isn't the Korean most people speak.
The ~���ϴ� endings are what politicians and guys in the army use. The elders I've met seem perfectly happy with me just using the �� ending for politeness.
I'm working myself through Seoul National University's �ѱ��� 1 (shamedly for the length of time I've been here) text for learning Korean. A whole lot of stuff is packed into the book and there's a practice book to accompany it. I can't wait till I get to �ѱ���2, �ѱ���3... and finally be able to tell that KT Megapass technician what a useless s**t he is. |
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ilovebdt

Joined: 03 Jun 2005 Location: Nr Seoul
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