- pronunciation - When is ㄹ pronounced as L and when as R? - Korean . . .
The base pronunciation of ㄹ in the initial position (such as in 라) is a "Flap R" or Alveolar Lateral Flap In the 받침 it is similar to a light L, or something sort of between an L and an R When this is followed immediately by another ㄹ, the light-L sound is elongated
- The pronunciation of ㄴ + ㄹ combination - Korean Language Stack Exchange
For example, if you pronounce the word 문리, the ㄴ turned into ㄹ because it is put right before ㄹ However, the rule of the pronunciation of ㄹ is: (according to a Reddit page) ㄹ has two different
- ㄹ 수 (가) 있다 없다 Problems in the addition of 가
ㄹ 수 (가) 있다 없다 Problems in the addition of 가 Ask Question Asked 9 years, 4 months ago Modified 9 years, 3 months ago
- verb endings - Difference ㄹ래요 vs ㄹ까요 - Korean Language Stack Exchange
My gut feeling, as a non-native speaker, is that ㄹ까요 is a bit more formal than ㄹ래요 That is how use them I use ㄹ까요 when speaking to a superior I am familiar with, while I use ㄹ래요 to peers I do not know well, but am able to use a less formal register with
- grammar - Difference between -ㄹ 을 것입니다 and -ㄹ 을 거예요 - Korean Language . . .
Difference between -ㄹ 을 것입니다 and -ㄹ 을 거예요 Ask Question Asked 8 years, 6 months ago Modified 8 years, 6 months ago
- grammar - ㄹ 거에요 vs. ㄹ 거예요 - are both correct? If so, do they mean . . .
ㄹ 거에요 vs ㄹ 거예요 - are both correct? If so, do they mean different things? Ask Question Asked 8 years, 9 months ago Modified 8 years, 9 months ago
- What is the etymology of the question ending `ㄴ가` `는가` `ㄹ가(ㄹ까)`?
Since for the ending ㄴ가 는가 ㄹ가(ㄹ까), there is an obligatorily incorporated "relativiser-looking" particle (ㄴ 는 ㄹ), I am wondering whether this expression has evolved from a "relative clause-dependent noun" structure Moreover, I have seen expressions such as 있을까를 생각한다, suggesting there is something "nominal" about this ending as it can be attached to
- 두음법칙 - When did North and South diverge in pronunciation of initial ㄹ?
8 According to Wikipedia, North and South Korean treat word-initial ㄹ in Sino-Korean vocabulary differently: In South Korea, ㄹ is silent in initial position before i and j , pronounced [n] before other vowels, and pronounced [ɾ] only in compound words after a vowel
|