Grammar and expressions
no part of speech | none |
-nikkayo
(informal addressee-raising) An expression used to indicate that the preceding content is the reason or basis for the speaker's judgment.
no part of speech | none |
-niman
An expression used to indicate the act or state is being compared to something else.
no part of speech | none |
-da motada
An expression used to indicate that the act mentioned in the preceding statement cannot be continued.
-da motada
An expression used to indicate that the state mentioned in the preceding statement reached the limit and cannot remain the same.
no part of speech | none |
-daga boda
An expression used when one newly realizes a fact mentioned in the following statement, while doing an action mentioned in the preceding statement.
no part of speech | none |
-dagado
An expression used to indicate that a certain act or state is easily changed to another act or state.
no part of speech | none |
-dageona
An expression used to explain something by listing some behaviors or states as examples.
-dageona
An expression used to choose one of two or more conflicting behaviors or states.
no part of speech | none |
-dageodeun
An expression used to indicate that another person's remark is the condition or basis for the following statement.
-dageodeun
(formal, highly addressee-lowering) An expression used to conclude a sentence by quoting another person's remarks as a reason or basis.
no part of speech | none |
-dageodeunnyo
(informal addressee-raising) An expression used to indicate that the speaker's own behavior is based on another person's remark.
no part of speech | none |
-dago
An expression used to pass along what the speaker heard from another person, or to present the subject's thoughts, opinions, etc.
no part of speech | none |
-dagoyo
(informal addressee-raising) An expression used to repeat or stress the speaker's remark.
-dagoyo
(informal addressee-raising) An expression used to confirm or question another person's remark.
-dagoyo
(informal addressee-raising) An expression used to show off something to others.
no part of speech | none |
-dagie
An expression used to indicate that something the speaker heard is the reason or basis for the following statement.
no part of speech | none |
-dagillae
An expression used to say something the speaker heard as the reason or basis for the following statement.
no part of speech | none |
-danam
(formal, highly addressee-lowering) An expression used to refute something lightly.
no part of speech | none |
-dane
(formal, moderately addressee-lowering) An expression used to tell the listener something the speaker knows from having heard it.
no part of speech | none |
-daneunya
(formal, highly addressee-lowering) An expression used to ask the listener something the speaker heard from another person to cross-check the information.
no part of speech | none |
-daneun
An expression used to quote someone, while modifying the following noun.
no part of speech | none |
-daneunguna
(formal, highly addressee-lowering) An expression used to convey something newly heard to the listener with wonder.
no part of speech | none |
-daneun-gun
(formal, highly addressee-lowering) An expression used to convey something newly heard to the listener with wonder.
no part of speech | none |
-daneunde
An expression used to convey something heard or quote someone, adding the speaker's own thought or question.
-daneunde
(informal addressee-lowering) An expression used to give the speaker's opinion indirectly, by conveying what the speaker heard.
no part of speech | none |
-daneundedo
An expression used to convey what the speaker heard or someone's opinion, implying that there is a contradictory opinion later in the sentence.