Billy Go's Blog, page 5

April 9, 2025

I created TWO MORE Korean language CHEAT SHEETS

I’ve now released a total of 12 cheat sheets for Korean, and they’re all completely free. These newest ones are for all of the most common Korean counters, and for common Korean colors. You can get these new ones, as well as all of the previous ones by clicking the links in the video description.

And that’s it for now! I would like to make more in the future too. Let me know if you have ideas you’d like to see for future cheat sheets.

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Published on April 09, 2025 06:54

April 8, 2025

“And” ~(으)며 ~(이)며 | Live Class Abridged

The form ~(으)며 isn’t commonly used (and you’ll likely never need it in your conversations), but it can be found in written texts and more formal uses. This form also becomes (이)며 when used with the verb 이다 after nouns.

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Published on April 08, 2025 09:05

April 2, 2025

Who is the Korean Tongue Twisters Master? | Son vs Dad

I wanted to see how good Jeremy is at tongue twisters, since he hasn’t been exposed to as many as I have, so we did a challenge. We tried to see who’s better and faster at several Korean tongue twisters, and the winner gets a trophy. What other Korean challenges should we try?

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Published on April 02, 2025 08:21

March 26, 2025

I created EVEN MORE Korean language CHEAT SHEETS

Here are two MORE free cheat sheets, and these two are about the Korean numbers (숫자) and how to tell the time (시간). Again, these are free, and you can get them through my Patreon page.

So far I’ve created a total of TEN cheat sheets, and I’ll release two additional cheat sheets next month. What other cheat sheets would you like to get?

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Published on March 26, 2025 08:14

March 25, 2025

가운데 | Live Class Abridged

가운데 is a regular noun that’s used as a postposition (like a preposition, but it just comes after instead of before the word). It means “among” or “middle,” and it can also be used as a grammar form to mean “while.” It’s commonly used as ~가운데 and ~가운데도 (“even while”).

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Published on March 25, 2025 07:30

March 19, 2025

Why Jongho’s Korean sounds so POLITE | ATEEZ Deep Dive (8/8)

Here we are, at the final episode in my eight-part series about ATEEZ’s Korean speech. The last episode is about Jongho and how he speaks, writes, and sounds. Which episode was your favorite? Let me know here or in the YouTube comments!

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Published on March 19, 2025 08:11

March 18, 2025

~다시피 & ~다시피 하다 “As you…” | Live Class Abridged

~다시피 has several uses, and can be used on its own with verbs like 보다, 알다, and 듣다, but it can also be used with ~하다 to mean “to almost do” something. I explain all of its uses in this live stream.

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Published on March 18, 2025 08:57

March 12, 2025

Who is the Korean Counters Master? | Son vs Dad

My son Jeremy and I wanted to do a Korean quiz together, so we picked several topics and the first topic we chose was Korean numbers and counters. We had mom help us to set up questions for us to try to answer, as well as prepared a prize for the winner. Whose Korean is better? Me? His? Does it even matter? Find out in the first episode!

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Published on March 12, 2025 08:29

March 6, 2025

Why Wooyoung’s Korean is INSANE | ATEEZ Deep Dive (7/8)

Who’s your favorite ATEEZ member, and why is it Wooyoung? Actually my favorite is San, but from the first video I ever saw of ATEEZ I realized that Wooyoung was going to be a fan favorite for a lot of reasons. He’s expressive. He’s difficult to understand. He talks fast and sometimes talks loud. He’s a goofball. I know I just described half of ATEEZ, but this week’s newest video is all about Wooyoung.

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Published on March 06, 2025 07:57

March 5, 2025

“Before” & “After” | Live Class Abridged

In my most recent live classroom I taught how to say “before” and “after” both nouns and verbs, and several related forms. We learned 전 and 후, but also the intermediate level 이전 and 이후, which include the time they’re referencing. The full live stream lasted over 2 hours, but you can review everything in just 14 minutes!

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Published on March 05, 2025 08:19