This is a sharp, no-nonsense breakdown that strips Korean syntax down to its logical core without the usual academic bloat. It perfectly captures how particles enable structural freedom, making a complex linguistic shift feel entirely intuitive.
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Korean Sentence Structure: How Word Order Works #Shorts本站添加:
Here's the thing about Korean that trips up every English speaker. The verb goes at the end, like everything you know about word order is backwards. In English, we say I eat rice. In Korean, it's literally I rice eat. Once you get this, everything clicks. So, the pattern is always subject object verb, every single time. And here's why this actually works. Korean uses tiny particles afterwards to show what's the subject, what's the object. So, even though the structure is strict, you can shuffle things around for emphasis without losing meaning. Start simple.
You can literally just say the verb alone, and people understand from context. Then add your subject, then your object, then throw in time and place, but that verb, it stays at the end. Questions? Same word order, just raise your voice or add a question word.
And to say not, just stick in before the verb. I go deeper into this on markyianna.com.
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